Sen ee
IM THESE LARGE AIR FILLED
Rueser sumTsS BOYS WOULD FIND
FOOTBALL A NEW, AMUSING GAME -
FULL OF COMIC FUN.
CAN /T 8& DONE?
BRAINS... .... they’re scarce
In the long run, brains rule the
world. The'principal thing that holds
humanity back from perfection is
that there are not enough first-rate
brains to go around. The world has
produced few original thinkers. Those
whose thoughts have been preserved
have exercised far greater influence
and for longer periods than all the
rulers, armies and builders put to-
gether.
At a social gathering the other
night the question came up as to
who, by the power of his brains 4-
lone, had most widely influenced the
course of mankind. Leaving the pest
frank Parker
Stockbridge
human nature to itself,
If I were to come down to recent
times I would add Karl Marx and
Charles Darwin, as the foremosi
brains of our times. But I can’t see
far enough ahead to guess whether
they will be as influential a thousand
years‘ from now.
se s s
IDEAS... . . . put to work
The value of original ideas is thai}
they set so many unoriginal people
at work to see whether the ideas will
work or not.
An idéa is no good unless it is put
to work, no matter how original it
is. Clerk Maxwell, the English ma-
100 years out of consideration, for it! thematician, origimated the idea that
is still too soon to evaluate thoughts
So recent, I picked as my list Confu-
cius, the Chinese philosopher; Aristo-
tle and Plato, the Greek thinkers;
Euelid, the father of geometry; Gali-
leo, first to imagine that the world
was round and to guess that there
was another side to it; and Shake-
sneare, the universal interpreter of
Established 1817
BANK OF MONTREAL
cA presentation, in easily understandable form,
of the “Bank’s
ANNUAL STATEMENT
31st October, 1934
LIABILITIES
LIABILITIES TO THE PUBLIC
Deposits : : . . ° te
Payable on demand aay aie notice,
Notes of the Bank in Circulation’. . . '°
Payable on demand. :
Bills Payable : . . . . . ie
Time drafts issued and outstanding.
Letters of Credit Outstanding : . : ,
Financtal responsibilities undertaken on behalf of customers
(see off-setting amount [x] in Resources’).
Other Liabilities to the Public . . : P
Items which do not come under the foregoing ‘b. -adings, in-
cluding $9,000,000 advances from the Dominion Government
under The Finance Act.
Total Liabilities to the Public . : : ‘: ‘
LIABILITIES TO THE SHAREHOLDERS
Capital, Surplus and Undivided Profits
and Reserves for Dividends . : : ‘.
This amount io ef nts the shareholders’ interest in the Bank,
over which liabilities to the public take precedence.
Total Liabilities . : : : , .
RESOURCES
To meet the foregoing Liabilities the Bank has
Cash in its Vaults and in the Central Gold Reserves.
Notes of and Cheques on Other Banks , ie 7
‘ Payable in cash on presentation.
Money on Deposit with Other Banks 7 . 0
Available on demand or at short notice.
Government and Other Bonds and Debentures .* «
Not exceeding market value. The greater portion consists
of gilt-edge securities which mature at early dates.
Stocks : ‘ . : : :
Railway and oda il aia other stocks, Not exceeding mar-
ket value.
Call Loans outside of Canada . ; P ‘
Secured by bonds, stocks and other negotiable securitres of
greater value than the loans and representing moneys quickly
avatlible with no disturbing effect on conditions in Canada.
Call Loans in Canada
Payable on demand and sean by boade
greater value than the loans,
and stocks of
Bankers’ Acceptances . .
Prime drafts accepted by other banks.
TOTAL OF QUICKLY AVAILABLE RESOURCES .
(equal to 71.97% of all Liabilities to the Public)
Other Loans . : . . . . :
To manufacturers, farmers, merchants and others,
tions consistent with sound banking.
on condi-
Bank Premises : , ‘ . . .
Three properties only are carried in the names of holding
com panties, the stock and bonds of these Com pantes are en-
tirely owned by the Bank and appear on the b poks at $1.00
im each case. All other of the Bank's premises, the value of
which largely exceeds $14,500,000, uppeur i this heading
Real Estate, and eterers on Real Estate Sold by the
Bank .
Acquired in the course of the Bank’ s business and in process
of being realized upon
x Customers’ Liability under Letters of Credit
Represents lrabilittes of customers on account of Letters of
Credit sued by the Bank for their account
Other Assets not included in the Foregoing
Making Total Assets of. . 7 . Z ;
fo meet payment of Liahilittes to the Publie of
leaving an excess of Assets over Liabilities to the Public of
PROFIT
Profits for the year ended 31st October, 1934
and LOSS ACCOUNT
atter miking ap
tions to Contungent Reserve Fung
for Bad and Doubtful Debts hay been made
Less Dominion and Provincial Goverament Taxes.
Dividends paid or payable to Sharehoideis - + $2
Reservauon for Bank Premises
Balance of Profit and Loss Account, 3hst October,
Balance of Profir and Loss carted forward
WA
CHARLES B. GORDON,
President
* * *
rOpPrta-
{, out of which Fuad tull provision
. $4,105 024 34
900.654.8353 $3,204
S80 OOO OO
100 OOO. 00
BOG,
JACKSON DODDS,
loint General Managers
$630,218,835.10 |
35,255,876.00
185,183.19
6,522,749.56
10,386,724.55
$682,569,368.40 4
76,538,810.08
$759, 108, bik 48
28,670,917.74 |
|
16,764,669.62 |
|
317,936,912.23
|
103,789.95 |
32,133,844.20
|
|
$ 87,210,888.26 |
‘
i
8,399,657.67
26,528.08 |
$491,247,207.75
|
|
243,477.041.21 ‘i
|
14,500,000.00 |
1,487.975.10
6,522,.749.56
1,873,204.86
$759,108,178.48
682,569,368.40
$ 76.548,810.08
369 S51
$2,980,000 00
$ 224,369.51
1,585,151. 28
$1,809,820 79
The strength of a bank is determined by its history, sts policy, its management
and the extent of its resources.
For 117 years the Bank of Montreal has
been in the forefront of Canadian finance.
|
men began building brains into the
. tools of production, making machines
, | which could be operated without the
use of brains. That made it possible
? . to set men of little brain power at
: work turning cut the most perfect
all matter, visible or invisible, moves
in rhythmical waves. He set down
the idea in a mathematical formula.
Herz, the German physicist, took
Maxwell's formula and discovered
that the idea was sound. There were
waves of space. He wrote down his
proof of that. Then Marconi set him-
self to the task of putting those
waves to work for the transmission
signals, and wireless telegraphy was
the result, with its offspring, radio
broadcasting.
One idea of an obscure mathema-
tician has thus given work to. mil-
lions, cut down time and space, and
gives enjoyment and information to
hundreds of millions. In its field it
has changed the customs’ and
thoughts of the world.
Everything that we can call pro-
gress got its start in the mind of
some original thinker.
TOOLS... . aid to muscles
Brains and their product,
are tools.
ideas,
The highly-skilled, highly-
paid workers of the world earn big
pay because they add those tools to
the mechanical devices with which
the ordinary worker has to do his
daily job.
Industrial
progress began when
mechanisms. And since labor, in the
Ang run, is, always paid in propor-
ticn to the value of its product, by
multiplying the number of perfect
products the worker could produce in
a day the brain-treated tools made it
poosible for him to earn more than
he ever could have earned with his
unaided muscles.
And, on the whole, the product of
the machine is far better than the
product of the hand-working crafts-
man.
PATENTS... . . and ideas
You can’t patent an idea. All that
you can patent is the machine or de-
vice that makes the idea work. Ideas
once made public, are common pro-
perty for whoever
thein.
can make use of
My friend, the late Glenn Curtiss,
had an idea which would make it
easicr for an airplane
tried it,
to fly. He
and he got a pa-|
tent on the device. The
sued him for
it worked,
Wright’ sj
infringement of their!
though the airplane they had!
appli |
cation of an idea that was far older |
than either Wright or Curtiss. They |
thought they had patented the idea of
flying.
Inventors frequently
someone else has stolen their idea. |
What they mean is that some other |
man beat them to it making a ma-
chine
patent,
patented was quite a different
claim
that would work. And even’
the inventor has to give every-
bedy the right to make his invention
after 17 years. The word “patent” |
means to make public.
protects him in the use of his device
for 17 years in consideration of his
making it public.
then,
Government
Otherwise, he could
keep it a secret forever. |
- « s |
COPYRIGHT . it purpose |
There is a big row brewing over the |
rights of authors to the
Under the
author of a
story or a Song, or the composer of a
copy- |
hook,
brain work.
right law the
their
piece of music, can copynght it, and
sue and collect damages if
uSes his material for
anyone
profit) without |
his permission
That
but the
is the fairest sort of a law, |
radio broadcasters and the
motion
picture don't like to
right to use popular mu-
peaple
pay for the
sic So the
got together and = are
small fee to picture
broadcasters
authors and composers
charging a
theatres and
Now the Government is suing them
as a monopoly! That seems absurb
to me. But the worl is full of pirates
who make a living by stealing other
people's property, and maybe they'l!
get away with it.
There would appear to be a serious
shortage of alsike for domestic needs
1934
plus the small carry-ov-
in Canada next spring as the
production,
er, i8 not expected to exceed
than one half normal
more
requirements.
that |
profits of { =
SLAT’S DIARY
Friday—Joe Hix, sed he wood of
had to fix the- leek in his Roof oney
as Luck wood have it the leek cum
|Tight over the tditchen sink,
Saterday—I herd pe
praktising his . speech
witche he is a going to
Daliver at his club
‘meeting hex Wensday
after noon and even if
I-do say it myself I
don't think his speech
will amt. to very much
but he has got sum of-
fle nice jesters. to go
with his speach.
Sunday—The Sunday
skool supt. was a try-
ing to tawk Slim Fes-
ner about gambleing
and betting muny and
etc. and Slim sed he wassent ever
going to bet eny more and the Sunday
skool supt. sed he was afrade he
wood and Slim wanted to bet muny|=
he woodent.
Munday—The, teecher told us to-
day that Honnesty was the
Pollicy. so I diddent tell her about
last nite at home. I teld pa and ma
I was takeing a book back to Blis-
terses after dinner insted of that I
and Jake went out to see cud we find
some Hickry nuts. so when supper
time cum they woodent let me have
no Shrimp Sallad. Then that nite
both of them got Indijestion also Ant
Emmy.
Teusday—Pa was reading where
Crime costed the U.S. all most ten
billian dollars last yr. and Ant Em-
my rimarkea that she thot we got all
of the crime we payed for even at
that.
Wensday—Ollie Deffs Husbend left
her about six years ago and today she
told pa if it wassent that she was
83o Centamentle she wood go to the:
cort house and ask about getting a
Sepparashun frum her husbend.
Thirsday—Mr,. Gillem says Condi-
; Shuns is picking up. He went in the
bank today to borry a cupple 100 $ an
insted of refusing him rite off the
Bat they hessitated a minit before
they refused him.
Wit and Wisdom
My handicap in golf is my honesty.
Even the Sears Roebuck catalogue
turns literary: The new _ portable
tyewriter is so quiet that when it
writes it whispers.
Women become nags because their
husbands behave so like mules.
According to the reformers, mosi}|
of the movies have unsound effects.
Walter Winchellism: Mr. and Mrs.
Thurs and Such are being heir-condi-
tioned.
Mud thrown is ground lost.
It will be pleasant, too, when girls
fingernails get out of the red.
She was a good cook as cooks go,
and as cooks go, she went.
We've had so many messes in
our family that we have a mop ou
our coat of arms.
Margot Asquith’s unforgettable pic-
ture of a portentous lady of the Bri-
tish aristocracy: Rectitude, platitude,
high hatitude.
Crested wheat grass seed,
paratively new grass seed to attaj
comercial
produced almost exclusively in Sasik-
atchewan and Alberta. The 1934 crop |
for commerce in Alberta is estimated
at 20,000 pounds. This being slightly
larger than the production of 1933.
XMAS! XMAS!!
We have a few
SUGGESTIONS
Suitable for Xmas Gifts
Call and see us
You are always welcome at
R. T. WRIGHT’S
HARNESS AND SHOE SHOP
best |:
a com-
importance in Canada, 1s)
.
DECEMBER 5th: 1934
le RR ann ant ee
r"
-
CTUALLY-—it takes less than 1¢ worth of
Magic Baking Powder to make a big, three-
layer cake, And you can depend on uniform good-
ness—every time. No wonder Canada’s foremost
cookery experts say it doesn’t pay to take chances
with doubtful baking powder. Bake with Magic
and besure!
“CONTAINS NO ALUM.” This
prs -veaperwater Brey Ft
oe Meste Baking
tnareainnt.
B A rK | NU
POWDER
YOUR HOME IS YOUR CASTLE
Admit only clean, constructive news by reading
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
A Daily Newspaper for the Home
“+ gives all the constructive world news but does not exploit crime and scandal.
Has interesting feature pages for all the family on Women’s Activities, Home-
. making, Gardens, Education and Books. Also pages for the Children and Young
Folks. Vigorous editorials, an interpretation of news in the “March of the
Nations” Column and “Watching the World Go By”
are of especial interest to men.
4.
The Christian Science Publishing Society
One, Norway Street, Boston, Massachusetts
Please enter my _ subscription: to The Christian Science
perlod of
One year
Six months
Monitor
Three months $2.25
One month 7
1
Even Rheumatic Pains
Eased Fast Now!
BAD HEADACHES, NEURITIS PAINS OFTEN
RELIEVED IN MINUTES THIS WAY
Remember the pictures below when
ou want fast relief from pain.
emand and get the method doc-
tors prescribe—Aspirin.
Millions have found that Aspirin
eases even a bad headache, neuritis
or rheumatic pain often in a few
minutes!
In the stomach as in the glass
here, an Aspirin tablet starts to dis-
solve, or disintegrate, almost the
! instant it touches moisture. It be-
gins “taking hold’ of your pain
practically as soon as you swallow it.
Equally important, Aspirin is
safe. For scientific tests show this:
sad does not harm the heart.
Remember these two points:
Aspirin Fie and Aspirin Safet
And, see that you get ASPIRI tt
is made in Canada, and all dru gists
have it. Look for the name Bayer
in the form of a cross on every
et tin of 12 tablets or economical
bottle of 24 or 100 at any druggist’s.
Why Aspirin Works So Fast
Drop an Aspirin
tablet in a glass of
water. Note that BE-
FORE it touches the
bottom, it is disinte-
grating.
i}
|
IN 2 SECONDS BY STOP WATCH
An Aspirin tablet starts to disinte-
grate and go to work.
What happens in_ these lasses
happens in your stomach—ASPIRIN
tablets start ‘‘taking hold” of pain
a few minutes after taking.
When in Pain Remember These Pictures
— ASPIRIN DOES NOT HARM THE HEART —
|
|
| THE EMPRESS CAFE
FRESH FRUIT and GROCERIES
| GOOD MEALS GOOD ROOMS
CLEAN BEDS
Meals at All Hours
Quan Hall — — Proprietor
CORNER OF FIRST AVE. & MAIN 8ST.
COME TO VANCOUVER
* + BRITISH
COLUMBIA es
GEORGIA
THE MOST POPULAR HOTEL ON THE COAST
HE life of the city centres about the Georgia. You'll
enjoy the cosmopolitan atmosphere and ultra-modern
facilities of this fine hotel—you'll appreciate every service
being so reasonable and friendly.
For any information write,
E. W. HUDSON, Manager
Aspirin tablet. _
Y SPU Ge
| AUD SO WERE Ol OUR
JAY Te GATHER MORE
-ACTS~LETS SEE WHA
ie CAN FINO!
Of ST
}- > SH THE © RANT
3 SEATED
THE SILK INDUSTRY ONCE FLOURISHED rm re
CONNECTICUT TO SUCH AN EXTENT THAT IN
a
ES OF BLRMA WHO SMOKE BIG CIGARS, EN- at
© OMT WICH THE MEN DO NOT SHARE “THE y
“9 FoR T'S hint
mis a ‘
OUR GRIM VISITOR
I write this, thinking of old Win-
ter—grim to most of us who live in
the so-called “Temperate Zone.” Win-
ter certainly adds to the household-
er’s responsibilities as well as to the
duties of the family doctor.
The kiddies are going to school...
What a blessing. Have you immun-
ized your little dears aginst pos-
sible contagions they may encounter
working in the little army? Diph-
theria may put in its ugly appear-
ance. Scarlet fever should be pro-
vided against. And, there is a good
immunizer against whooping-cough.
It’s nice to be safe, you know.
I shall not attempt to advise you:
in this important procedure; I’m just
reminding you that it’s time to see
Dr. Goodheart, your fatfily doctor.
He has all the things you need.
Now is a good time to take invoice
as it were—of the children’s feet.
Give those toe-nails a going over See
that each little tenminus is in proper
shape for the winter’s housing.
Those little feet take a thousand steps
to your one! Select shoes for winter
wear with capable soles that give a
natural casing for the growing foot.
Above all, do nothing that will cramp
the toes. Also insure against cold
wet feet.
I do not believe in ‘“darning-needle
toes” for shoes, either juvenile or a-
dult. The feet are very importanc
Ladies! Attention
Your Corsettiere is always
ready to give your needs
the closest attention.
Phone 81 for Appointment
Mdme. H. Messier
The Spirella Lady
Los. ANGELES is NEARER To NEW VoRK THAN
Rd 747 ACHESUIRE FARMER APPEARED INCOAT hkEW YOR IS TO LOS ANGELES —Nou GAIN 3
BSTOCKINGS MACE OF CONNECTIOUT SILK...
pain cap €H- TA~CUT
HOURS ON THE SUN GOING WEST,,,
RE WE ARE BACK FROM AN-
THER FACT-FINDING TRIP ~
HOPE TD SEE YOU AU AGAIN .SooN
JOHN JOSEPH GAINES MO
ongans. They are the best servants
if properly respected.
I perhaps need not say this but
my big, parent-heart is right. I do
not believe in, nor endorse in any de-
gree, the cute little nothings that I
see worn by my ladies and little dau-
ghters out on the streets in winter.
And I look at feet often.
CHEVROLET STANDARD
A four-door sedan model, the first
since the introduction of the Stand-
ard Chevrolet in 1933, has just been
announced by General Motors Pro-
ducts of Canada, Limited. It fills a
' generally-felt need in the lower-priced
Chevrolet line, and is attracting at-
tention by its Fisher body improve-
ments involving roominess and com-
fort. .
John and Marie Winters are mid-
gets. She is about three and a half
feet in height, and her husband six
inches taller. They do not eat as
much as other men and women, but
their clothes cost more as they are all
made to order.
‘he FIRESIDE
PHILOSOPHER’
By ALFRED BIGGS
Don't blame fate for your failure.
. es e e
Ambition can make or break you.
s e es
The gold of friendship is tested by the
acid of adversity.
e s e
Age has little to dc with the calendar;
it is more a matter of spirit.
s s e
Probably the best known man in the
world in a clown—Charlie Chaplin
s s s
Me is wise who retires from pubtic life
at the height of his fame
* . *
Che human
ocean.
mind is still an uncharted
EpWwAaRDSBURG
The
(Canada Starch Sales Co.,
BRAND
CORN SYRUP
famous energy-producing
sweet —an easily digested food
invaluable for infants, growing
children, and enjoyed by the
whole family.
Limited
Food.”’
SUNNY MAID
HEALTH FOOD
IS THE CHEAPEST AND BEST
Save money on flour!
wheat at the mill for Wainwright Flour,
Bran, Shorts and “Sunny-Made Health
Exchange your
SUPPORT HOME INDUSTRY
WAINWRIGHT FLOUR MILL
N. RICKER, Proprietor
VER Vv
LATES|
by, Mary Marshall
—
>
1,2 2
P 8220
Designed in Sizes: 36, 38, 40, 42,
44, 46, 48, 60 and 62. Size 46 re.
quires 3% yards of 35 inch mate:
vial.
PRACTICAL HOUSE
Pattern 8220—New and smart are
the pleated sleeves and stitched belt
of this house dress and very becom-
ing to larger figures.
FROCK
The yoke on
waist repeated in effect on the skirt
gives the desired
lines.
much slenderizing
Every woman who does her
sewing wants her house frocks easy
to cut and make and this is one which
is very simple.
is
own
Calico being used for house
frocks because of the gay and varied
designs and
found.
colors in which it
For PATTERN, send 15 cents
in coin (for each pattern de-
sired), your NAME, AD-
DRESS STYLE NUMBER and
SIZE to Patricia Dow, (Wain-
wright Star) Pattern Dep'’t.,
115 Fifth Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y.
Up to the end of October, the num-
ber of pedigree certificates registered
in 1934 with the Canadian Live
Stock Records and approved by the
Dominion Minister of Agricu
was 2,200 horses; 27,200 cattle;
sheep; 6,110 swine;
297 dogs; 1,161
goats.
ture
6,985
8,417 foxes; 6,-
poultry, and 87
is |
place.
THE STAR, WAINWRIGHT, ALBERTA
eT PRT ee aa
- Experimental Farms News
SELF-FEEDER SAVES WORK
AND FEED
On many farms “doing chores”, or
milking cows, feecing pigs, etc., is
just so much work added to an al-
ready long day's work. This is par-
ticularly the case during the .rush of
spring seeding, and again during ¢ut-
ting and threshing. . Many labor gav-
ing devices have been tried, and one
of the most satisfactory is the gelf-
feeder for hogs. Since the ‘British
quota” was started in July, 1932, | the
raising of hogs has been one of the
mdst profitable branches of farming,
and many more farmers would be
keeping hogs were it not for the la-
bor involved.
At the Dominion Experimental Sta-
tion, Lacombe, all growing pigs are
self-fed. The advantages of the self-
feeder are many and great. Filling
the feeder only about once a week
saves about sixty per cent of the la-
bor of hand feeding. Self-fed pigs
make around nineteen per cent high-
er daily gains, with only about eight
per cent and this
extra grain is more than compensated
for by the reduced waste; they show
more uniformity of size and greater
finish than when hand fed. The rea-
son for this is that the pigs
hive constant access to the feed they
eat little and often, instead of gorg-
ing on two or three big meals a day.
Digestion is much better, and the
smaller, weaker pigs are able to get
their full share.
Plans for the construction of a self
feeder will be supplied by the Do-
minion Experimental Station, La-
on
more grain used;
where
combe, request.
WINTER BROODING MARES
On many western farms, mares uS-
ed for breeding purposes are expected
to slug through the seasoh’s work
and then take the same pot luck in
being turned out with the other work
horses in the fall to rustle
stacks, etc.
conditions
at straw
Mortality under these
extremely high and
greatly increases the cost of produc-
tion.
With increased interest in the
breeding and production of horses for
farm power it is essential that brood
is
mares should have reasonably good |
care during pregnancy. For a num-
ber of years it has been the practice
at the Dominion Experimental Farm}
at Indian Head to winter brood mares
in and out. In other words, the
mares are divided, a number running
out during tha.day time with the
benefit of the farm stable for shelter
at night, and the remainder assigned
to a corral with shed open to the
south for shelter and feed racks pro-
vided for roughage. Both lots usu-
ally receive the same ration, cut feed
such aS oat straw or cut hay mixed
with a little grain, fed twice daily.
Water is also available twice a day
| geese
with potassium iodide added at week-
ly intervals.
Observations indicate that the cor-
ral lot require considerably more feed
to keep them in satisfactory condition
as compared to the lot stabled at
nnght. On the other hand, very little
difference, if any, is observed in the
vitality and vigour of the colts at
birth.
is essential to provide brood
mares with reasonably good feed and
shelter if best results are to be ob-
tained in raising colts.
GRADED POULTRY DEFINED
Some provision merchants have
been advertising in the newspapers
recently ‘‘Government Graded Poul-
try’’ and “Branded Beef,’ without
stating the grade of these products
Not to state the grade of the poultry
or the color of the brand of the beef
is felt to be misierding to the gener-
al public. Buyers of products that
are graded according to standards set
by the Dominion Department of Agri-
culture should
whether the
insist on knowing
is Grade A,
and if the beef
poultry
Grade B or Grade C,
is red or blue brand. Most of the
government inspected and graded
poultry is marked with tags that in-
dicate the grade.
Just as there is
the
t1y-chicken,
N
a wide difference
several kinds of poul-
fowl, turkey, ducks and
so are there wide differences
in quality in each kind. The govern-
ment grades denote the quality and
take the guesswork out of buying on
between
the part of the purchaser, but while
poultry for export must be tagged
according to grade, and poultrv on
the domestic
on stated
market offered for
government grades must
conform to the Canadian Standards,
the practice of affixing tags is option-
al. Consequently, unless all poultry
on sale are marked with the grade
they represent government
grading, the “Government
Graded” does not afford much _ help
to the housewife.
There are two classes of govern-
ment graded dressed poultry Milk-
fed and Selected and, again, these
two classes are divided into
according quality, the
almost entirely
manner in which the
fed.
Milkfed poultry show a white color
the deposits of fate and a fine
soft texture in the skin and flesh, the
outward evidences of special feeding.
There are three grades of Milkfed
poultry--A, B, and Special. The Se-
lected class which shows yellow
color in the deposits of fat and no
evidence of milk-feeding,
grades, namely A,B,C,
sale
under
phrase
grades
latter
upon
to de-
the
has been
pending
bird
in
four
Special.
has
and
Thus, 18 can be seen that the declara- |
tion of the kind of grade is a matter
of considerable importance to
purchaser.
the
Tp
GRANT FLEMING. M.D.
COLD FEET
When winter comes,
midst
subject
cold feet
Cold feet
funny stories,
they
are
in
the
but
are
our again
of many
like most other
anything but a joke
son who has to bear
are
afflictions,
to the
the affliction.
The feet become cold when the
culation of the blood
in other
cir-
the feet
when wari
In 18
poor, or, words,
blood does not flow through the blood
4+ vessels of the feet sufficiently quickly
to keep these extremities warm
It is obvious that anything which
in@erferes with the circulation
rise to cold feet and
chiefly in winter when the most
pid of heat
whose hearts
ives
hands, noticed
ra-
radiation
Those
body
are
damaged as to cause poor circulation,
which is in the
that are farthest from the heart,
complain of cold feet.
AS we grow older, the blood vessels
tend to lose some of their
elasticity. of
most evident
will
natural
this are
AS we ad-
vance in years and our arteries be-
come hardened, we are more apt to
experience the discomfort of cold ex-
tremities.
Young persons are not immune to
this complaint. their case, the
fact that they suffer from cold feei
is most often due to their. dwn ac-
tions. Tight shoes, which, to the
The effects
seen in poorer circulation.
In
eye
takes |
sO
parts |
per- |.
OF THE
Canadian Medical Agsociation
Edited*by
~ ASSOCIATE SECRETARY
the may be beautiful,
appreciated by the whico
For one thing, they in-
of
net
owner, are
feet
they encase.
terfere with the blood supply and, as
we have said already, that means
cold, uncomfortable feet
The blood keeps the feet warm and
‘it can do this quite readily unless the
| loss
of heat is so rapid that heat
cannot be supplied quickly enough to
meet the demand. Thin soles, on a
day when the temperature is well
down the scale, are more than the
heating apparatus of the body can
take care of, and so the thin soles
have cold feet above them as well as
a cold sidewalk below them.
“He has cold feet" is a phrase used
to describe those who apparently lack
courage. There is some truth in the
the
and then follow,
poor circulation
and chilling of the skin including the
feet.
Those who suffer from cold feet
should seek ‘the cause of the trouble.
It may be a symptom of anaemia or
other abnormal condition of the body.
In all cases, loose shoes and stock-
ings, of a weight that is suited to
the weather, will help. A dip in cool
water,
description because
arteries to contract,
fear causes
in natural sequence,
rough towel, helps to maintain a good
circulation in the parts. This should
be practised at bed time
whosee feet are cold at nights
; HELLO ADAM,
ee
FIRST BILL
eo ly
Yack
“RomEerR-
EATING, HEY? ]
followed by a ‘brisk rub with a!
by those |
|
|
|
~ “The Holy Bible”
AN OLD MAN SETS OUT
Paul left Ephesus after the riot
but not to return to Jerusalem; he
was going across into Europe spain
We may imagine
the conversation
that took place, fo,
we get a wonder-
ful glimpse into his
mind in the letters
to the Corinthians
“You are going
over the same
ground again
RB Paul?” |
; “Yes, but every time widening the
civcle. This is third time out, and|
eich time I make a little larger
and see the work growing.”
“When do you get back to Je:
lem?"
swing,
usa-
“Next spring at Easter. I
to take the
that the Jerusalem
ceived.”
ain
roO-
i
back biggest collection
church ever re-
‘e 1
“Are you going to stay there? |
“Stav there? Do you think T could
ever be content to settle down and
stay in Jerusalem?"
“But you are getting to be an old!
man, and travel is hard on you and,
dangerous,”
“Yes, T have been in dangers of |
mary kinds. Jt has been my privil-
‘ere to travel farther than any of the
other apostles,
| blue
in labours
stripes above
more a bundant, in
measure,
move frequent,
Of the Jews five times receiv-
ed I stripes save one.
in deaths oft
Thrice was I beaten with rods,
once was I stoned, thrice I suf-
fered shipwreck, a night and a
day I have been in the deep;
In journeyings often,
waters,
in perils
of in perils of robbers,
in perils of my own countrymen,
in perils by the heathen, in per-
ils in the city, perils in the
wilderness, in perils in the sea,
among false brethren;
in
in perils
in prisons [
In Weariness and painfulness,
in watchings often, in) hunger
and thirst, in fastings often, in
cold and nakedness."’
“That is a long list of perils, Paul.
It must nearly have broken you
down.”
“T have still a heavier burden, my
anxiety for all the churches I have
established.”
“Do you carry them on your mind
and feel responsible for them?”
“Who is weak and I am not weak?
Who is caused to stumble and I burn
1ot?”
“You have done a great work and
have much to be proud of.”
“I am proud of it, and have been
criticized as being vain about it. I
have sometimes been ashamed of my-
self for letting pecple know about
my pride and joy in all this. Yet,
while 1 have sometimes made myself
a fool by seeming I really
am boastful. God forbid that
IT should glory, save in the cross of
Christ and in the joy of service.”
“When you go out again where
shall vou go?"
5
to boast,
not
“Back again over the same ground,
but to all the Roman
sub-capitals in Asia Minor and Greece
and then to Ro
more widely,
me."
Most
birds.
people prefer
But
ones,
it is said the
green. What is most
bout them is their
yellow
red
and
canary
there are ones, and
black,
canaries
and blue
and
first were
interesting a-
music
CLEANS ond POLISHES
WINDOWS, MIRRORS, BATH
TUBS ond WASH BASINS.
CANNOT
SCRATCH
B. C. LAUNDRY
Beeong Ave. Wainwright
FAMILY WET WASH
Reugh dry, per doz
(No Blankets)
Deliver Monday for Tuesday Wash
CLEANING and PRESSING
Luke Wing
The Doctrine of Self Help
The progress of the agricultural group
will be measured by the individual's discern-
ment of the truth that self-help is the soundest
basis for advancement.
ALBERTA POOL ELEVATORS
Listen To Pool Broadcasts each Wednesday
at 8:15 p.m.
e
Just a Reminder
That those Christmas Photographs should be
made now
REMEMBER
12 Beautiful Personal Photographs Make
12 Personal Christmas Gifts
Make your
ap
pointments
Have you made your visit to our
you are
store, if not you do not know whal
missing in the CHRISTMAS GIFTS SELECTIONS
The store where ere you get get the select gift
FREE
FREE
With every 50 cent purchase you are entitled to a draw on a
23-PIECE CHINA TEA SERVICE—BOUDOIR LAMP—
BEAUTIFUL DRESSED DOLL
Wainwright Studio
Proprietor
WAINWRIGHT
W. CARSELL
MAIN STREET,
HE GETS
FIFTEEN
PROFESSIONAL | |
vi
LEGAL
J. A. MACKENZIE
Barrister, Solicitor
Notary Public
ee
ST. WAINWRIGHT
M. G. CARDELL
BARRISTER —— SOLICITOR
Notary Public, Commissioner
Money to seen
atl te,
1 Door South of the Billing Block
Main St. . Wainwright
F. C. DICKENS
Barrister, Solicitor
Notary Public
Office at House
FIFTH ST. W. WAINWRIGHT
DENTAL
) DR. H. L, COURSIER
dan Dental Surgeon
‘ aed ® OE,
= Block Anesthesia
we
vi
BILLING BLOCK
PHONE 2 WAINWRIGHT
Dr. E. V. Springbett
DENTAL SURGEON
Tory Building
Phone 3 — Wainwright
MEDICAL
HL. OC. WALLACE, M.D., C.M.
Physician and Surgeon
Post Graduate of Montreal and
Liverpool
Phone 68
Wainwright ........ ..-
DR. GORDON MAYNES
Physician and Surgeon
Surgery and Diseases of Women
——a
Phones 61 and 114
Office Adjoining Standard Pharmacy
“MUSICAL
MRS. A. KNUDSON
Teacher of Hawaiian Guitar
(Certificate of Diploma)
PRICES REASONABLE
J. C. McLeod or Irma P.O.
Arranging for class for Wainwright
pupils
Shipments of live stuck from Wesi-
ern to Eastern Canada in 1934 up to
October 18 included 89,593
4,478 calves, 51,134 sheep, and
916 hogs.
Rates $1.00 Up Phone 610)
Royal George Hotel
101st Street
(Near Union Depot)
EDMONTON
FIVE STOREYS OF
SOLID COMFORT
The Home of Service
and Comfort
FIRST-CLASS CAFE
Cafe Owned and Operated by
the hotel and will satisfy
your every wish
Free Bus to and From All
Trains
R. E. NOBLE Manager
Rates $1.00 Up Phone 1131
HOTEL CECIL
Cor. Jasper and 104th
EDMONTON
RIGHT IN THE
of the
CITY’S SHOPPING
HEART
CENTRE
THE HOME OF
SERVICE AND COMFORT
FREE BUS MEETS ALL
TRAINS
cattle; |
159,-—
W,.d, HUNTINGFORD :
Member Canadian Weekly Newspaper Assoc. and Alberta Press Assoc.
+, Président—International (1.0.0.
‘
at. The Star Building Main
¢ Subsoriptions
To SubSchibers in the 40-mile ra-
dius $2.00 per, year; other post office
points, Canada, $2.50 per year; United
gg land. and Foreign Coun-
per year. All etrictly in
“ " inivertising Rates
‘Conttbiot tates supplied on applica-
uot: ‘es
‘litnaadified strayed, etc., not exceed-
mg 25 words, 50c for first insertion;
three insertiong .for $1.00; strictly
payable in advance.
SSS
” She Waiuuright Star
® Member of The Empire Press Union
PUBLISHED EVERY W EDNESDAY MORNING
oa ‘TH STAR, WAINWRIGHT, ALBERTA
Wainwright Grain Prices
Following ate latest grain prices at
the close of the market on Tuesday,
Decembér 4th as supplied by the
H Editor and Publisher
F.) F ratertial Press Association
A.P. Grain Co.
WHEAT
Street, Wainwright, Alberta. 1 Northern i...0.....0..0..000.00-. eee
Legal and Municipal Advertising| 2 Northern .............-.----.--
45 cents per line for first insertion
and 10 cents per line for each subse-
quent insertion.
Transient Advtg.—Cash with Order.
All changes for Contract advertise-
ments will be inserted till forbid and
charged for accordingly.
os
¢
Accounts rendered monthly
DECEMBER 5th 1934
WEDNESDAY, D COW ys wicven cis Gececsenn consctsnncpeckastatiecetiss 39%
1
LITTLE the new store for several reasons. Bi BONS Seteetinestipant ar eer roses 32%
GIFTS First, there is the element of curiosi-
Christmas! What a day to conjure! ty; mext, there are the offered bar-| themselves. At last accounts it
with!
Always a day to look forward to
with joyful anticipation, ever a day
to look back upon with cherished
memories.
Among all the christian nations of
the world, in all their recorded his-
tories, in all their legends, in all their
traditions, no other day stands out so
gloriously nor means more to man-
«ind.
Christmas is not only the birthday |
of the Christ but the birthday of the
greatest teacher of the greatest philo- |
sophy the world has ever known.
Our present civilization was rocked |
in the cradle of this philosophy and
nourished on the truths it teaches. In
our maturity we are rocked by indi-
vidualism, nationalism, international
jealousies and race hatred. One
wonders sometimes if, after all, the
expehiences of the passing centuries
have taught us mucn or little of the
eloquence of that refrain so joyously| and they are afraid to jump into the:
“Peace
Men.”
And at no time in the history of the |
dawn of the first |
has mankind been 19) {he
sung when Christ was born
on Earth, Good-Will. Toward
world, since the
Christmas day,
goodwili
greater need of peace and
end undersanding among men of all,
nations, than now.
One year ago we hoped this Christ-| of any business.
mas would find uS more prosperous,
E re able to
follow the
gift-giving and gift-receiving,
with that hope one year ago we prov- me ‘ . i
ed our faith in ourselves, in ou!
friends, in our future,
next Christmas.
| manger in Bethlehem; and
foundation stones of
philosophy--Faith and Hope.
So long as we have these we shoula
not worry acedlessly about the tempt-
| ing, tinseled trinkets which we are
too poor to give and too proud to re- | ing up with a good book or maga-
ceive, for this is but a pretty custom.
|Toere is something _jreater,
iig aS moeMoiy. ‘ins us
the Season,
and muads of men
Curistmas day; and this
five names
Kindliness,
Love, Charity,
ness, Cheeriness.
Micy we continue to have
ne dawn of the new day, and carry |
try, lo’ rnd small, are
ard buys an old,
‘hres ohout the whole year the cheery
custom of |
and IS IMPROVING
in our country.
Now that the day is here we find
unrealized the thing we so hopefully
visualized.
There is still restlessness among
the people; there is distress among | the air.
the nations; still is that strange para-
dox of want amidst plenty a reality.
But we are a peculiar people and, |
undaunted, again hope for
er, happier and more prosperous day , ment during recent hearings in Wash-
a bright-
Thus do we prove to ourselves and cations Commission.
the world that we still cherish the |
faith of our fathers, that we do ad-, portunrate.
} here, consciously or unconsciously, to
| the Philosophy emanating from the
that
j even in our adversity and perplexity ,
pes still stand upon the two great
this wonderfu: |
deeper,
nobler than. this; something as endur- | in various European
che spirit of
implanted in the hearts
to be re born each
spirit has| nibit it
bk riendh- |
faith in
gains in the advertisement; and third,] seemed as though the Cabinet min-
the purchasers are comparing prices] ister responsible for the police would
and quality to see if the store is on| have to resign his office, if mot even
the level and if they get the goods a8S!}to commit hari-kari.
advertised. It is important, of course,
that the merchandise be handled pro-
perly and that it be worth the mon-| Back of it lies the insurmountable
ey. id difficulty of dealing with Japanese di-
With this as a foundation, exten- plomats on level terms.
sive advertising does the rest. The
new store conftinues to carry a page
at least once a week, sometimes two Their emperor is the direci
pages, and suddenly the people of! gescendant of the Sun God, and is
that town or city are amazed to find’ gar superior to any earthly power.
that ‘where the old store was a failure| jyery Japanese owes his life to the
the new store is doing an enormous) Mikado, whose will is the sole basic
business and making money. law of the land. What the Mikado
The queer thing is that other mer-| wijls his subjects will gladly lay
chants in the same city fail to under-| Gown their lives for.
| stand that they can do the same
thing. One reason they do not is be-| equality with Great Britain and the
cause they never have done it, and
; United States. It has refused to re-
the other reason is that the cost of a!
‘cognize the right of any other na-
page of adveriising looms to thei tion or of the League of Nations to
That is a situation incomprehensi-
ble to the citizens of a democracy.
superior race, in their own estima-
tion, superior to all the rest of the
world.
Just now Japan is demanding naval
; raise any question about its occupa-
; tion of Manchuria. Withdrawing from
the League,
;no to the
| cold water.
It is hard to break down the old
habit of not advertising but, after
it once is started, it is harder to make
Japan will not say yes or
not fortifying the Ladrone Islands as
successful man stop advertising.
merchandising,
chandise and plenty of
| advc rtisimg will make a success out
a naval hase. It begins to look as if
Good gocd mer-
newspaper ;
Japan were ambitious to occupy the
position which Germany, under the
used to hold, that of the po-
| tential trouble-maker of the world
TING? .
Kaiser,
| SELF-DEFEA
Signs are multiplying that radio
jacve “ising faces a rising tide of
public resentment. Average sponsors
may not realize to what extent re-,
ceivers are becoming silent, when
strictly commercial programs are on
KINGDOM By Judge Rutherford
One needs only the witness) When Satan rebelled he was the
of his own family circle, or the testi ‘king of the world appointed to such
mony of numerous friends to know: position by Jehovah. Because of Sa-
that a sort of revolt is on. The fact | | tan's rebellion Jehovah gave His word
was revealcd as a nation-wide move-' that in His own due time He would
take the rulership away from Satai
and give the kingdom of the world
to Jesus Christ. Jehovah could have
done this immediately following the
rebellion of Satan but because Satan
had declared that God could not put
men on earth who would be faithful
to Him God permitted Satan to con-
tinue over a Stated period of time
that the great question or issue in
The idea seems to be to spur lis-| dispute might be tried and fully de-
action by advices that! termined. In the meantime He would
more strenuous. For’ have His faithful men act as His wit-
nesses to the name of Jehovah, and
when the time limit expired He would
exhibit His supreme power, that all
zine might know that He is the true and
Such things seem better regulated: only God, and the source of all life.
More than nineteen centuries ago
earth, and then Je-
| ington before the Federal Communi-
Advertisers seem increasingly im
And the penalty of lis-
tening to an orchestra, or a comedy
sketch,
plosive admoninations to go out ana
buy a centain brand of soap, or cereal,
|or ciparettes—-and do it now.
is too often a series of ex-
| teners to
grows even
many the action is that of shutting)
off the receiver altogether, and curl-
nations, as in!
Italy, Denruark, the Nethlands. Great! Jesus came to
Britain hilds so tight a rein over ra-| hovah anointed Him to be the King
dio advertising as practically to pro-| of the world; and for this
Christian Science Monitor. Jesus began to preach, ‘The kingdom
of heaven is at hand’; meaning that
He, Jesus, was the King and now He
reason
: : ; SELLING F ; ‘
If we can radiate the sunshine of MAnava had been appointed to that high posi-
yne or more of these attributes of | xa tisi ae ‘i a! tion. Satan immediately set about
| dvertising in foreign countrie .
the Sp.rit, We are rich indeed, though | 6 8 to kill Jesus because God had ap-
| cannot alone build up Canada's tour-!
‘ist industry to its maximum propor-
must also be
pointed Jesus to be King. Satan em-
ployed every known means to cause
tions. The “product”
elves, faith in our fellows, faith! ' . t ' ' j the death of Jesus. The clergy of
x visitors are xo h > hap-| Sagi
in our future. May we continue to! right : ae ae toe i @P"| that day were the chief instruments
. »y and eager to come again. The im-| f
acpe @nd watch and patiently await eked oe ° = the Devil used to kill Jesus. (John 8:
F iv nd, 4. . ¢ ;
| portance of this repeat business a | 42-44) In time Satan caused his wick-
adver-/ ed agents to crucify Jesus, and then
| of the friendly word-of-mouth
| tising of satisfied “customers” was
cpiiit we So abundantly possess each | | Satan concluded that he had rid the
‘hristmas Day
For, atter all, the most
pics One Can give another cost noth-
ics, Dut make the recipient
the giver blessed A friendly smile,
» bindly nod, a helping hand, a cheery
word, These
jewelS we may have for the
without
toking
apology
philosophy
ald give
little
sUint or
Bits from a great
PROVEN KOAD
10 SUCCESS
It is a curic:s thing that men de-
| sari. g success is bu ©38 will See oth
or pieroua ics next door making a suc-
6s by alvertising and refuse to un-
der:trnd how it 18 done
In every city and town in the coun-
outstanding
adv orlisers wh se
success 18S primari-
nd exclusively due to the exten
sive use
enterprising merchamt comes to town
run-down
and immediately cleans up the store,
puts in a good stock and begins an
advertising The _ first
local pa-
campaign
broadcast iS a page in the
‘per. That brings a fine business to
priceless |
rich and |
are some of the little!
of the local newspaper An|
business |
| frequently emphasized at the rece earth of its promised King. He was
convention of the Canadian Associa-| grraid Jesus might be resurrected;
| tion of Tourist and Publicity Bureaus, | hence Satan tried to prevent his e.
of the Association) surrection; but in this he failed. Je-
| and of the government. hovah showed His superior power by
The statements contained in the raising Jesus out of death, and then
ent elsewhere’ tie exalted Him to the highest place
Show that it is essential that the peo-’ in heaven. (Philippians 2:9-11) Jesus
was then the King, but Jehovah re-
quired Him to wait until the proper
time to begin His reign as King.
Psalm 110:1
Jesus that He
must die and be raised from the dead
and then He must go away and re-
ceive the Kingdom, and that He
come again and receive
both by members
| advertisement appearing
| ple of Canada realize the obligations
of acting
millions of
who every year holiday in the Do-
minion
| as well as the advantages,
; as hosts to the tourists
told His disciples
JAPAN THRE
| INCOMPREHENSIBLE
| Nothing that we have read or heard
| throws a stronger light upon the dif- | His faithful folowers and set up His
Kingdom in full operation. (John 14:
1-4) The coming of Christ Jesus and
of His Kingdom, therefore, is of the
greatest interest to all real Christi-
ang, because it means the end of
day and piloted the Imperial Satan's rule and the beginning of the
car along a street which had not been | lasting rule of righteousness. For
properly prepared for his coming. A| this reason Jesus taught His follow-
police inspector attempted suicide to! ers to pray, “Thy kingdom come.” By
wipe out the dishonor he felt over the, constantly praying this prayer His
incident. Other officials were locked followers would show that they were
up to killing: in full beart accord with the kingdom
would then
ference between Japanese and every
the world thin the
consternation in Japanese officialdoim
other nation in
| because the police guard attending the}
Mikado took the wrong turning the
other
prevent them from
They are 4;
inquiry whether it is or is!
The Watch onter
Bible Lecture Contributed by Jehova i's \v ing ties
NOTICE
MUNICIPAL DISTRICT OF VALE
No, 892
NOTICE is hereby given that, un-
der the provisions of the Tax Re-
covery Act, 1929, the Municipal Dis-
trict of Vale, No. 392, will offer for
sale, by public auction, in the Muni-
cipal Office, situated on the S.W. 2-
43-4-w4, on Monday, the 17th day of
December 1934, at 2 o'clock in the
afternoon, the following lands:
Pt. of Sec. Sec. Twp. Rge. M.
N.W. 19 41 4 4
S.W. 6 42 4 4
N.E. 13 42 4 4
8.E. 13 42 4 4
S.W. : 28 42-. 4 4
N.W. 24 42 4 4
8.E. 32 42. 4.4
SW. - ' 83 42 4 4
§.E. 36 42 4 4
S.E. 12 43 4 4
S.E. 24 43 4 40
S8.W. 25 43 4 4
N.E. 32 43 4 4
N.E. 7 41 5 64
S.E. 10 41 5 4
N.W. 16 41 5 4
N.E. 16 41 5 4
S.E. 21 41 5 4
S.W. 23 41 5 4
S.W. 31 41 5 4
N.E. 31 41 5 4
N.W. 32 41 5 4
S.W. 27 43 5 4
N.W. 2 41 6 4
N. % of 13 41 6 4
W. 2 of S.E. 31 41 5 4
S.E. 22 41 6 4
) N.W. 32 41 6 4
Ss. % 4 42 6 4
S.E 6 42 6 4
| N.E 9 42 6 4
| S.W 13 42 6 4
| N. 1% 14 42 6 4
N.W. 17 42 6 .4
S.W. 20 43 6 4
N.W. 34 43 6 4
Each parcel will be offered for sale |
subject to a reserve bid, and subject
to the reservations contained in the
existing certificates of title. Terms,
| CASH, unless otherwise arranged.
%edemption may be effected by
payment of the full amount of ar-
rears of taxes and costs at any time
prior to the sale.
Dited at Alberta, this
dth day of October, 1934. |
DON. PAWSEY,
Secretary-Treasurer
Edgerton,
7-12
ighvtecusucss, hence on Jehovah's
side.
During the past nineteen centuries
Jehovah has caused the truth to be
told to the people, and scme have be-
lieved it and have become the faith-
ful followers of Christ Jesus. During
that period of time Jehovah has taken
out from amongst the world,men and
women and made them His witnesses
on the earth. Now the end of Satan’s
world has come. Christ Jesus has
His power and begun His own reign,
and now His faithful followers still
on earth, appointed to be witnesses
for Jehovah, must give testimony con-
cerning the Kingdom. They are com-
manded to tell the people that Jeho-
vah is God, Christ is King, and that
the Kingdom is here. (Matthew 24-
14) In obedience to this comandmeni
men and women for some time have
going from house to house
preaching the gospel of the Kingdoin
by word of mouth and by printed
message. Many people have sup-
plied themselves with these books ex-
plaining the truth and have gained |
a knowledge of Jehovah, and, having
So done, are now greatly rejoicing.
Upon the earth today there is much
woe, distress and perplexity, and the
Devil is falsely trying to make the
people believe that God is responsible
therefor. Satan causes many schemes
to be brought forth by men, by which
schemes, it is claimed; peace and
prosperity will come to the people.
But all of these schemes are certain
to fail, }he reason being that the time
has come for God's kingdom under
' Christ to rule the world. Therefore
Jehovah says to those who are. of
good will and who desire righteous-
ness: ‘Behold my servant (Christ),
whom I have chosen; my beloved, in
whom my soul is well pleased: I will
put my spirit upon him, and he shall
shew judgment to the (nations). Ana
in his name shal the (nations) trust.”
(Matthew 12:18,21) The kingdom un-
der Obrist is set up, and it will dash
to pieces Satan's rule, that the way
may be made clear for righteousness
The
organization
Armageddon is
been
to continue for ever on earth.
destruction of Satan’s
will Soon take place
near at hand!
NEWSPAPERS TO PAY INCREASE
IN USE OF NEWSPRINT
Canadian newspapers will have to
pay $2.50 a ton increase for the first
six months of 1935 and $5.00 more
for the last six months of year ac-
cording to agreements made by the
newsprint industry.
Subscribe To “THE STAR”
DECEMBER 5th» 1934
Your opportunity to meet and
_consult the Tip Top Tatlors’
STYLIST |
W. D..LOWDEN .
who will be at our store
Thursday, December 6th
EN! ‘This is important! On Thurs-
day, December 6th, W. D. Lowden,
the Tip-Top Tailors Stylist, will visit
our store, where he may be consulted
without obligation by men of this
town on any questions of style, fabric
or color pertaining to a well-dressed
appearance.
The benefit of Mr. Lowden’s experi-
ence is of course given without obliga-
tion and is offered as just one more
reason why you should come to our
store, at least to compare, before you
order Fall clothes anywhere.
More woollens than ever make up the
Tip Top Fall range— more styles —
better tailoring and finish—yet the
price remains $24.50 for your un-
restricted choice.
A. SAWERS
Alberta
EXCLUSIVE DEALER FOR
v TIP TOP TAILORS
The Worlds Largest One Price Tailors Stores from Coost to Coast - Dealers Ever yan .
Wainwright
one price
——
Reap The Full Benefit
from your
Car Investment
Winter Driving can be just as Pleasurable if you procure the neces-
sary safeguards against the extreme weather. We heve a full stock of
- PRESTONE ANTI FREEZE
CAR HEATERS FROST SHIELDS
SKID CHAINS MUD HOOKS
AND G. E. RADIOS
Quaker State and Red Indian Winter Oils
WINTER STORAGE
by day or Month, at Moderate Raies
In steam-heated garage.
Brunker’s Service Stat.
INSURANCE
We handle Fire, Automobile, Sickness and ac-
cident, Burglary, Hold-up and every other
kind of insurance except Life. We represent
Strong Reliable
Companies
Fires are more prevalent in the fall. ;
Your business promptly attended to.
JOS. WELCH
Agent for Strong Companies — Prompt and
Fair Adjustments
Agent for Western Savings and Loan Co.
Bonded Issuer of License Plates for Provinolal Government
Phone 57 & 93 Agent Atlas Lbr. Co. Ltd.
St. Thomas’ Church
(Anglican)
SERVICES
8 a.m.—Holy Communion each Sun- WAINWRIGHT LODGE
day. ‘ No, 45
11 a.m.—Choral Communion, alter-
bate Sundays. Meets every Monday Night at
10 a.m.—Sunday. School.
7:30 p.m.—Evening Prayer.
EIGHT P.M. in 10.0.F. Hall,
Third Avenue, Wainwright.
Visiting Brethren Always Welcome
L. Mitenell, N.G.
T. Lissimore, R.8.
_A. Sawers, F.S.
——LL————_—_——
Adeline Rebekah Lodge
No. 564
Baptisms, Weddings and Funerals by
Arrangement with Chas, N. Bateman
(vicar).
e
/
Rev T. Edgar Armstrong, B. A., B.D.
Minister Meets First and Third Thursdays
of Each Month in 1.0.0.F. Hall on
: ‘Third Avenue.
11.30 a.m. —-Public Worship |
12.00 noon—Sunday School
7:30 p.m.—Public worship.
First Sunday—
, 3.00 p.m.—Grangedale
Third Sunday—
3.00 p.m.—Mascot
Second and Fourth Sundays—
10:00 a.m.—Fabyan,
3:00 pm.—Greenshields
Miss M. Prosser, N.G.
Miss B. Love, R.S.
Mrs. M. Morris, F.S.
| A cordial welcome is extended to
| All Members of the Degree when:
visiting in Town.
!
|
BAPTIST
GOSPEL SERVICES
Wainwright
We invite you to worship
Come
and follow in thought what Jesus did
to brine life to men.
Bl d S t Wall hold regviar Gospel Services in
aes — the TOO. Hall every Sunday |
wah , Afternoon-—3.00 p.m.
' Fvesing~-7.39 p.m.
== os = .
Fred Bennett.
Pastor |
You are
with us.
Rev. Huao Doyle, P.# cordially invited to worship
i
|
|
\
|
asst.
AMONG THE OLD-TIMERS|
“REMINDERS OF OTHER DAYS”
TWENTY YEARS AGO TEN YEARS AGO
Small Brothers will move from the J. G. Lewis of Buffalo, N.Y., has
Alberta block on Main Street in De-| moved into town and is now employ-
cember to the first door east of the| eq by the Wainwright Pharmacy in
post office. their radio department.
Mr. George Smith brought in 8} Mrs. Charles Church left on Wedl-
drove of nearly sixteen hundred sheep| nesday last to spend the winter at
from Sleepy Hollow district on Sat-| her old home in Scotland.
urdayg. Mr. Smith is one the largest
sheep ranchers in this vicinity and
recently disposed of more than one
thousand of his ‘“woolies’” all in splen-
did condition.
3
Local curlers are now arranging a
“Canadian National’ bonspiel in the
local rink at which all towns for a
ed.
Mr. J. Morton and family of Cam-
rose will take up permanent residence
on the old Wilcox farm in the near
future. He brings with him many
head of stock as well as a splendid
outfit of machinery.
Mr. P. Brassard with his family
left on Monday to spend the winter
ent parts of Quebec.
“Mr: D. R. Brown arrived here last
com-| Week from Winnipeg to fill the posi-
tion of accountant at the Bank of
Montreal left vacant by Mr. F. Pawl-
ing.
Operations have now been
menced by the Grattan Oil and Gas
,Company for the drilling for oil ten
miles west and two miles south of the
Battle River Bridge. Mr. J. Snyder,
oil operator of New York, interviewed
Mayor Lally with a view to opening
up negotiations with the town for a
contract to drill for gas on lands
held by the Town of Wainwright in
this vicinity.
Dr. and Mrs. H. C. Wallace, Mr. J.
A. McKenzie and Mr. F. Traynor
were the local delegates to the big
liberal convention held at Calgary
when Hon. Chas. Mitchel was elected
to the post of leader of the provincial
Liberal party.
The patriotic concert and dance at Sympathies are being expressed to
Gill Edge on Friday was a great suc- | Mr. J. Telford
cess in spite of the distance froi a]
town and the cold weather. The re-| pis aged father at
ceipts of well over one hundred dol- |
lars will to the
Orilla, Ont.
local Patriotic} Mr. A. Roberts, of Sheepskin Flats,
go
Fund. left last week for a prolonged visit
pares to the Old Country.
It
radius of fifty miles will be represent- |
with relatives and friends in differ-
THE STAR, WAINWRIGHT, ALBERTA
of
pointed questions answered directly
from the word of God, and appearing
every week in this column. Cut out
and paste in a note book for future
reference. )
(Being the second in a series
Question No, 2
“HOW CAN I KNOW THAT THE
BIBLE IS TRUE?”
“The prophet that hath a dream,
let him tell a dream; and he tkat
hath my word, let him speak my word
faithfully. What is the chaff to
wheat? saith the Lord.
Is it not my word like as a fire?
and like a hammer that breaketh the
rock in pieces?
“The word of God is quick and
powerful, and sharper than any two
edged sword, piercing even to the di-
viding asunder of soul and spirit, and
of the joints and marrow, and is a
discerner of the thoughts and intents
of the heart.
“All scripture is given by inspira-
tion of God, and is profitable for
doctrine, for reproof, for correction,
and for instruction.
Knowing this first, that
no pro-
'phecy of the scripture is of any pri-
‘vate interpretation. For the prophecy ,
who on Monday re- |
ceived the sad news of the death of |
| ir
is with regret hat we announce
* |
§ GREENSHIELDS § the death of Mrs. Georgina Crampton,
* | on Tuesday, December 2nd, at the age |
Mr. R. M. Carl is seriously ill in| of 71 years. Her husband predeceas-
| ed her three and one-half
the Royal Alexindra hospital in Ed-| months ‘ax!
unton: | 50. Mr. Herbert Crampton, her only |
| Son, our local customs officer, as well
Miss H. Kennedy spent the week! as many friends, will mourn her de-
end in Lougheed visiting relatives. | cease.
Rev. J. McGrane,
11 a.m.—Wainwright.
N SYDENHAM
Presbyterian Church
§ |
* ae aay
Rev. W. §. Brooker, Minister Miss M. Sinclair spent the week
;end as a guest at the home of Mr and |
WAINWRIGHT ALBERTA | Mrs. I*. Dixon.
Regular Lord's Day service every! Cor gratulations.to Mr. and Mrs. W
Sunday morning at eleven o'clock | Woodward on the birth of a bonny
also in the evening at 7.30. Prayer
service every Thursday evening at
bouncings boy last week.
8° p.m Mrs. W. G. Mackay was visiting in|
12:15--Sunday School Classes, for the district on Wednesday last.
all ages. {rs. C. Alexander left on Saturdas
morning, for Vancouver where she
ALL APE WELCOME will spend the Christmas holidays
with her parents.
|
Heath Gospel Mission We are glad to learn that Alan
— Glenn who had an operation at the
Sunday School for all each Sunday | hospital on Friday is progressing
| family spent Sunday at Mr. and Mrs. | eyer popular
Mr. and Mrs. L. Carl visited rela-
tives at North Batileford last week. | MARTIAL COMPLICATIONS
is played opposite Edward Horton, the
~ comedian.
H. Jackson’s. :
' two couples manage to make an ex-
|
change
Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs
Philip Rajotte on the birth of their,
, son.
of husbands and wives, which
finally pleases everyone
satistied.
‘and al] are
The young people held a skating
party on Hills lake on Monday night.
at 2 p.m. nicely now.
R ms 1 4 ch 8 It sure was a big sale which took
eae a08PS ery ee mp: place at, the Stadshaug farm on)
eye ae Thursday last. The crowd was large
Lively Young People’s service :
and prices were high, and Bill Stuart
every Friday at 8 p.m. made a good job of the selling.
FUNERAL DIRECTING
And Embalming
Motor Hearse and Modern
Equipment
AMBULANCE SERVICE
DAY AND NIGHT
J. C. McLEOD & SON
Phones—Day 14; Night 104
Main. St., _ Wainwright
of Mrs. G.
days in town.
Mrs.
days
last
G. Stadshaug spent a_ few
week.
dred tons of frozen beef to Japan
during the first six months of 1934
as the result of a movement which
started early in the year.
IN mR. SP
_
= 4
numerals of 8
adults of
middle life and frequently those
whose years are well extended
toward the allotted span of life, all
join in the merriment of typical
Canadian winter sports.
During the winter season every
settled area in Canada is as easily
accessible by railroad as in the
summer and autumn months. Many
miles of provincial highways are
kept free of snow enabling the
motorist to reach cities, towns and
villages of international repute as
winter sport centres. Nearly every-
where are natural sites for skiing,
exceed the finger
hand, youths of ’teen age,
ANTLES of purest
crystal snow spreading
over glen and vale, the
smooth sparkling ice
surface of rivers and
lakes and the joyous
tinkling of sleigh-bells
remind one that the
season for beneficial
and enjoyable winter sports is again
at band. Other forms of recreational
activities are, for the time being,
quite forgotten. The toboggan, ski,
skate and sled are taken from their
summer store-house and properly
conditioned for the season’s festivi-
ties. Children whose years scarcely
we
Mrs. Glenn was a guest at the home,
Gregson ‘for a couple of |
as the guest of Mrs. John Ruste |
Canada exported nearly one hun- |
ORTS SCANAD
| S. Valleau left this week for Cold
| lake.
|
i ; ¥ Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Taylor of Red!
Deer spent a few days this week with
| °
§ SLIGO § Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Taylor.
* *
Mr. Vernon Guthrie arrived from) We are sorry to report Mr. Ed
Edmonton last week end and took) Lawrence is back in hospital.
‘his mother and father Mr. and Mrs.
J. H. Guthrie, back with him for al Mr. and Mrs. Armstrong visited
visit. Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Taylor Sunday.
Gwen Moore aoe Jast week end = wr and Mrs. J. Redmond neta their
| with Geneva Zajic. | wedding dance in the hall on the 26th
A large crowd turned out to Mr.!
and the
enjoying
place was packed, everybocy
a themselves.
James Redmond’s wedding dance
Rosedale hall on November 28.
Don't forget the Sligo schoo] whist |
| drive tonight, (Wednesday, Dec. 5th.)
Relatives of Mrs. A. J.
tainly pave
birthday.
Taylor cer-
her a surprise on her
5
§
*
We are sorry to learn that Miss
Mary McQuaker will be unable to at-
tend high school until after the
year.
ASCOT
new
Mrs. F. had been
delling her home last week.
EXbbern remo-
Mrs. B. Sharpe and son, arrived
home from the hospital last week.
Miss A. Nicholson spent last week
end in Trafalgar, the of Mrs.
A. Hutchison.
guest
We are sorry to know that Henry
Lindseth was taken to hospital last
week. We hope to see him around a-
gain soon.
§ HEATH §
* *
Heath telephone Company are now
operating the local line and have al-
ready secured new subscribers to it
The shareholder of this company are
kX. L. B. McLeod, Mr. Henry Tou-
chette, Mr. Anatole Touchette, Mr. H.
snowshoeing and _ tobogganing C. Mockford and Mr.
Covered rinks for hockey, skating,
and curling are found in cities, towns
Potvin.
St. Patrick's W. A. will meet on
and many smaller centres, aver Thursday afternoon, December 13th,
open-air rinks are legion. Carniv instead of i ; ‘
feats, including bonspiels, toboggan : ee ine Bate 22
racing, hockey matches, figure skat- account of Christmas activities.
ing competitions, ski-jumping con-
tests, snowshoe processions, and
firework displays, add greatly to the
enjoyment of a Canadian winte!
vacation.
The National Parks of Canada
Department of the Interior, Ottawa
will gladly supply information per
taining to Canada’s winter spor!
attractions.
Mrs. Arthur Patterson entertained,
the ladies of St. Patrick’s W. A. ata
quilling bee on Tuesday afternoon.
Arm lake school concert will be
held on Wednesday, December 19 and
Heath school concert on Thursday,
December 20.
On Wednesday evening last, Mr. SHOWN AS AMUSING!
jand Mrs. Don Pewsey of Ndperton, ~
| Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Stuart, Mr. and For Wednesday and Thursday of
Mrs. Duke Ott were dinner gues!s of , next Week, 1 hie is showing the
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Jackson Univers.) comedy-drama “Uncertain
: Lacy" in which picture the comedy
A large crowd from this district at- ; , .
anple predominates
tended the Apricultural Card Pariy As ee:
D rid . Phe story is a byplay on the com-
and Dance Irriday evening : :
; y evens Pacations cf a much-merricd lady
On Sunday Mr. and Mrs, Ray’ With the comic element carined out
Greer and family visited abr. and) to Its logical conclusion. Miss Gene-
Mrs. E. Jackson. | Vieve Tobin as an ‘emancipated’ wo-
‘man makes the most of her part, and
Mr. and Mrs. George Reid and
By a series of married life mix-ups
concerned,
came not in old time by the will of
main: but holy men of God spake as
they
“Search the
testify of me.
“He that is of God
words: ye therefore
because ye are not of God.
“These were more noble
we
scriptures; for they
heareth God's
hear them not,
than those
n Thessalonica, in that they received
e moved by the Holy Ghost. |
Goodies
for the
Festive
Let us do your holiday baking for you-and everybody will be happy.
Our deliciously-frosted Layer Cakes and tempting Pies are something
to “rave about.” And as for
and other Bake
Dainties
Cookies, Pastries
Shop
How the folks will love 'em
ALL MODERATELY PRICED AT
COWLEY’S BAKERY
|
MAIN STREET PHONE 13
‘
| PINE LNA, CURIE UE UREN Eo EU NEENEIE ey)
Rambling "Round New York
the word with all readiness of mind, | oo : ;
and searched the scriptures daily, | Maine's Governor bendine 3rann drums in answer to the government 8
| whether these things were so : pappes at a New York hotel for charges that his organization is a
“Jesus answered them, “Ye do eer, oon en route from a conference monopoly.
not knowing the scriptures. If any with Presideit Roosevelt. His menu) Three new piers were started early
man will do God's will, he shall know! ue Taho “potatoes: Back this month, each to be 1,100 feet long
of the doctrine. } in ihe evisu Maine, he summoned and the only piers in New York har
“Thy word is truth, forever settled Commissioner of Agriculture Wash-\ bor that will be large enough to he-
in heaven, ‘Thou hast magnified thy, sciia Surprised? Not at all. Wash- comodate the French Line's 1.029
word above all thy Sens “burn says Idaho potatoes are featur- foot Normandie which is expected in
“™at froma ehild thou hast known i on menus right in Portlind, Mains! Now York next June, or the Cunard
the holy scriptures, which are able to Preason right at home, in a potato Lines 1,018 toot Queen Mary expectos
make “tee wise unto | salvation Browing, statel So this is “Maine Po- on her maiden voyage in the spring ot
through faith which is in Christ tato Week” by preciamnation of the 1936. The piers run between 48th
Josi governor, Wouldn't he be surprised and 52na streets on the Hudson
Shee. Fomoive: the witness OL AEN: Wohe should learn that New York If your husband or wife is missing,
the witness of God is greater: for this hotels! so-called Idaho poiat were Colt teloplone the Missing Perser
is the witness of God, which he heath actually from Attine! Bureau cf Now York's poles for
testified of his Son. He that believeth Gene Buck head ef ‘Tin Pan, Alley’s You dave to app there da pers
on the Son hath the witness in him- American Society of Composers, A and preferably wath ao ph araph u
selfs he that believeth God hath made thors and Publishers, svys, “elyrhty “the missing Otherwise they'd De
hima lier; because he believeth not por cert ef all radio programs com- spending most of their time looking
the record that God gave of his Son. prise music of Some form, How are for people who turn up in friends
And this is the record, that God hatn{/ we going to keep on having hits if. epartments the morning mete with
given unto us eternal life, and this} the boys who write them don't receive + te ale headaches, asking for an
life is in his Son. commensurate compensation for their | “SPIP!:
“He that hath received his testi-] work?” .. Buck is beating the war Up on the cada of Third Avenue
mony hath set to his seal that God _ and 57th Street is a stone that looks
is true.” = eects: | like a tombstone. But, rest in peace,
“Verily, verily, I say unto you, He and were more than appreciated. ; Inquiry cue ma it is actually
that heareth my word, and believeth While Mrs. Warnock read an address, | Only one of the remajning milestones
1 him that sent me, hath everlast- Bobbie Watson and Cliff. Challenger! that used to mark the distance from
| or
|
| ing life, and shall not come into con-
§ HOPE VALLEY _ § aI unto life.’
|
| church
i
demnation;; but is passed from earth
*
§ EDGERTON §
ape *
Bloomington Y. P. S. held their
meeting lust Tuesday evening. Rev.
Anderson cf St.
an excellent
Mary’s church gave
address on some recent
findings in science.
The pre-season curling meeting was
held at the rink last Wednesday. A
large group of men were in attend-
ance. Forty players have paid their
fees and play will begin this (Mon-'!
day) evening Interest is keen and
prospects are good for a banner sea-
son.
A large crowd gathered at the
home of Mrs. H. Lewis last Monday
in honor of Mrs. W. Castle, a recent
bride. Many useful presents were
presented to Helen with all good
wishes for many years of happy mar-
ried life
Mr. (Butch) Malidore returned last
week from Wainwright hospital,
where he has been a patient for four
He
the Clrrence,
months. is living with his bro-
and we
ing him a speedy recovery.
the
were
Members of
United
the
Edgerton
guests
manse on Thursday evening.
contests and eats were
all
Bloomington
choir at
Games.
enjoyed by
Ladies’ Aid held a
quilting bee last Thursday and com-
pleted their seventh quilt for fhis
year.
A
home
Good going, we'll say.
large crowd gathered at the
of Miss ‘Bel’ Little last Friday
evening to present their gifts and bes?
wishes to the bride-to-be.
Yes, Christmas is coming. Turkeys
were shipped by the local butchers
on Saturday. The school children
have started with preparations for
the Christmas concert. Oh, and the
roaring game starts tonight.
Mr. C. Cooke was an
visitor last week.
Miss V. Edwards was a visitor in
Edmonton over the week end.
Edmonton
ASPEN §
*
A'miscellaneous shower was given
at’ the home of Mr. and Mrs. James
Lyttle on Friday evening in honor of
their daughter, Belle, who is to be
married to Lyle Wilson in the near
future, about eighty people attending.
The lovely presents were well chosen
|
all join in wish- |
carried a decorated box loaded with| City Hall on the road in “the coun-
presents followed by little folk Phyl-j try,” when 57th street was nothing
lis and Bernice Taylor, nieces of the| but farm land. .
bride-elect; Harry Krimball, Tommy amet came
Wilkinson, Reg. Bishop, Jackie Chal-
’ , GENERAL MO" S PLAN’
lenger, each carrying gifts placing 7 ea
them with the box in front of this EXTENSION
charming young couple. Monologues,
songs and duets were well rendered It is no secret that for a certain
after which a most dainty lunch was Period of time early in the current
served and dancing indulged in till Y°#8?: suLomOpie: Diyers were: Mee
the wee small hours. manding cars faster than factories
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith left. for could turn them out. The explanation
their new home in Washington and brought out the fact that the raw
material and other sources were being
pressed by a general trade
the supply of raw
and parts, however,
will be greatly missed; always prov-
ing to be good neighbors.
Lee Johns are now settled
Smith's home, lately vacated.
upturn
: Give ateriz
in Mr.| 7/Yen material
the factory can
Pete Walgren spent Friday evening turn out ae only to the Hmit of its
at the home of W. Warnock’s assembly line capacity Not since
ae O24 i ST reRen ete
More wedding bells ringing around | 1929 until the present has any exten
| gion cf sermk'y lie been
the corner and under the trees. Wh | : capacity
will be the third party, an epidemic | JUStfed by sales levels. For that
of weddings in and around Edgerton | eee eee: geen Seapmied. Or eae
plant of General Motors of Canada,
limited
has proved to be serious.
at Oshawa is interesting
| Construction work on new assembiy
The total number of live cattle ex- | Ines just completed at a cost of $300.-
ported to the British Isles 1934 000 represents the busier
up to October 25 was 44,138. | days ahead.
in prospect of
|
SAVE THE DATE
| FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14,
There’s a REASON and an OPPORTUNITY
THE REASON
THIRD ANNUAL
Welfare Concert
THE OPPORTUNITY
Your Opportunity to help spread Christmas
Cheer to the less favored in your community.
Third Annual Band Concert and Variety Entertainment and Dance
sponsored by the Wainwright Band and Women’s Institute. Entire net
proceeds will go to the W.I. Welfare Fund. Boost and BE THERE.
Tickets:
Adults 50c;
Children 25c
frietidly. kiss. j
| Just exactly the sort of a kiss that}
Billem needed. It made her whole soul
turn to Tony.
The minister was back again with
man in overalls, with grass stains
on them—he vrould be the handy man
wiho took care of the square of lawn
—and a taal girl with spectacles. He
had put a gown over his dark suit,
and he carried a slim prayer book
in his hand. He
“Stand together, so” he told Ellen
and Tony. “No, in front of me, Join
hands. No your right hands... ..”
Ellen, in-a daze, felt Tony’s large
fingers close about her small ones.
The minister's word swam around
in.a mist of sound. Beautiful words
—liquid, musical phrases—the mar-
riage service.
“Dearly beloved,” said the mims-
ter, and then—
“For better, for worse, for richer,
for poorer—” (Was Tony glancing
down at her—didn’t he know, could-
nit he guess, that the money didn’t
matter?) “In sickness and in health
eerie ak 5 te ti =
SYNOPSIS—Ellen Church, 17 years in a cool, sweet, lonely piace. Of
old, finds herself alone in the world her mother—who had warned her,
with her artist mother’s last warn-| with that sad, whimsical mirth, a-
ing ringing in her ears, to ‘love light-| gainst the very thing she was about
fy’. Of the world she knew little. All| to do, That, oh, God—her heart had
her life she had lived alone with her| niready done!
mother in-an old brown house in a/ The minister had come swiftly into
Small rural community. All her life,|}the room. A minister who wasn’t at
first as a new baby, then a bubbling | all old; who looked at Ellen as if he
child, then a charming young gir] . . .| liked her and who shook hands, firm-
she had posed for her talented moth-| ly, with Tony. The minister examin-
er who sold her magazine cover|ed the marriage license, and said to
painting through an art agent in the| Dien— ‘
city .. . Mrs. Church’s broken life. . .
the unfaithful husband, his . disap-
pearance ... and after 17 years of
silence announcement of his death
was at last disclosed to Ellen. The
mews of the husband’s death killed
Mrs. Church. .. .Ellen, alone, turned
to the only contact she knew, the art
agent in New York. Posing, years of
posing, was her only talent so she was
introduced to two leading artists,
Dick Alven and Sandy Macintosh.
Both used her as a model and both
fell in love with her... but Ellen
trying to follow the warped philoso-
‘phy of her mother to “love lightly’,
resists the thought of love. Her cir-
cle of friends is small, artists and two
or three girl models. Ellen attends a
ball with Sandy. While dancing a tall
young man claimed her and romance
is born. Now go on with the story.. And her lips answering those
Tony, his eyes alignt—(‘But it i questions . .
doesn’t mean anything, it’s just that eee “Mrs. Brander!" As she sat across
I’m a new sensation!” Ellen tried to the suavely white luncheon tabie
A mist of words. And the tall girl
fussing with a hang nail on her
thumb, and the mian in_ overalls
scratching his ear, and a fly buzzing
| just in back of ‘the minister’s head.
And, Tony's hands so damp, so ship-
pery with moisture, that it was hand
for him to place the little sapphire
hoop on Ellen’s finger.
The minister was speaking.
“How do you do, Mrs. Brander!”
he said, and Tony was handing him
a bill that shone very yellow in the
dim light.
And then Tony’s arms around her,
right there in the church. Ard his
lips asking questions against. her lips
|
It wasn’t such a gay luncheon after |
tell herself)—was helping her out of all from her new husband——nervously
tthe car. All at once his attitude to-| ~ Sipping a tomato juice cocktail and
ward her held a difference—it was — trying not to quake both inwardly
as if she had grown very soft, very| ‘You're very young, aren't you?”| and outwardly—-Ellen endeavored to
fragile. ie And, “Haven’t you any people you'd] tell herself that it was really her
“Well, here we are,” said Tony. like to have with you? Or—” at the|name now. And then she_ realized
“Any last statement you'd like to shake of Ellen’s head, “or any frienas, | that Tony’s voice was speaking. A
make to the press, Miss Church? Be- ‘° be witnesses. light voice — a gay voice.
fore entering the church?” | Again Ellen shook her head, “Oh, she said, summoning up what
Ellen essayed a smile. She was mutely, but Tony answered. He was-| courage she could. “Oh, so you're
realizing that she wouldn’t be Miss n't awed by the loneliness of the] still there!”
anything much longer. | church, not Tony—he wasn't eaten by “And will be,” answered Tony, '’for
“Keep back the reporters, big memories! . the next fifty years at least!”
boy. For I’m to be queen of the May!” “We didn't even remember we had It wasn’t such a gay luncheon, af-
Tony was answering seriously. friends,” he told the minister. “Say|ler all. Not exactly the sort of a
“You haven't any flowers!” isn’t there someone around here who /luncheon that a boy and a girl might
And then they were in the church |'©2 Witness for us?” |have together, after a chance meet-
and it was dim and cool and sweet} The minister nodded. He wasn't|ing at a jazz party.
‘as young as Ellen thought, at first! In a short while it was over.
He left the chapel. And, while he And Tony, rushing around the ta-
wes gone, Tony bent swiftly, and/b.e so that he-—and not the waiter—
(‘kissed Ellen. It was not the kiss of might pull back Ellen’s chair, was
and somehow very lonely. And El-
len .ceased to think of Tony, and
thought instead of her mother. Lying
rl ne ee eg
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Creat dub torpphion Dargai Mil mean.
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DECEMBER 5th, 1934
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“What now?"
Blien’s. winglike eyebrows were
dark smudges in her white face.
“Why, now,” she said, “now, you
know, Tony!, I’m going on to Dick.
To pose for him.”
She paused, but the thunderboli
didn’t fall, not as she had expected ih
to—not a8 it had fallen before. Tony’s
voice was low, and rather carefully|— '
controlled, but he didn’t say anything . Conducted By Betty Barclay
af Oe DAs. on abasia BISCUITS THAT APPEAL | degrees F.) 12 to 15 minutes. Makes 2 tablespoons gelatin
ng Ce pedir ganig ee piace,| Now that cooler weather is witn us| 24 biscuits. 6 tablespoons cold water
P "| biscuits are again becoming popular— Baking Powder Biscuits 1% cups boiling water
ve ae ee ee peer both hot and cold. Try these recipes/® 2 cups special cake flour, sifted 1 cup orange juice
Ame ED ey 7 you, if I may, after! vor the kind of bisctits you have al-| 4 teadpoons taking powder 6 tablespoons lemon juice
Oya Ga ele tai ce that hurt, | ¥8¥8 wanted to serve. ' % teaspoon salt ; % cup sugar
bg ry Meer, cement ha Tea Biscuits 2 tableapoons butter or other % teaspoon salt
a ee ee nna abana 2 cups special cake ‘flour, sifjgd shortening Soak gelatine in cold water 5 min-
ae ee ee ee 4 teaspoons baking powder Two-thirds cup milk (about) utes. Add boiling water, orange and
ee eee re on ee nee % teaspoon salt Sift flour once, measure, add bak-| lemon juice, sugar and salt. Cool.
oe en Sees So eee One-third cup butter or other ing powder and salt, and sift again. : Salad
ee ame Tony, A) ee shortening Cut in shortening. Add milk until When beginning to stiffen, add:
ae ee eee ee eee Two-thirds cup milk (about) soft dough is formed. Roll one-half 1 cup cooked peas
posing was done, now! That she did-
n’t care if she never saw a studio a-
gain. That she didn’t even care it
Dick — dear, honest, faithful Dick—
were quite swept out of her life. She
Sift flour once, measure, add bak-| inch thick on slightly floured board. 1 cup diced cooked beets
powder and salt, and sift again. Cut} Cut with floured biscuit cutter. Bake 1 cup cooked carrots, diced
in shortening. Add milk gradually] in hot oven (450 degrees F.) 12 to 15 Pour into individual molds and
until soft dough is formed. Turn on} minutes. Makes fifteen 2-inch bis-| chill until firm. Serve with any de-
\ floured board, knead lightly, roll % | cuits. sired dressing.
wanted (0 look ito the pide ever OF | sch thick und ede with gioared” bin: Jellied Vegetable Salad Baked Orange Marie
et ee eo? song me Pet cuit cutter. Bake in hot oven (450 (Serves 8-10) (Serves 8)
whole soul would be lost in their blue- 8 oranges
ness, but— _ = oe a, a a een lee 7 8 dates, stoned and chopped
“It'll take about two hours,” she “From the tone of her,’ she said, { more, climbing the stairs.
1 tablespoon coconut
1 tablespoon raisins
1 tablespoon chopped walnut meats
Cut off tops of oranges. With a
sharp paring knife hollow out a small
portion or each orange near the top.
said. “I’m due there at three. Yes,| “you'd think our ewe lamb had some- Again Ellen’s heart stood still. For
you can drive me to the place, Tony.| thing on the old conscience, what? | this time the tread was unmistaka-
And you may,” she didn't want, some-]| Never can tell, can one, Dicky? How-/} bly masculine. Again she, herself,
how to give the permission, but there] ever,” perhaps she sensed the hy- | stood still, with her eyes on the door.
wasn’t any way out, “you may stop] steria back of Ellen’s blazing eyes, | Knowing, even as she waited, that the
for me at five.” é however, it was this! I heard that | anxious eyes of Dick, the scornful when, Work: thé. Knife around to Ue
In silence they entered the red car| Sandy was gunning for you. That] eyes of Claire, were upon her. oui pieces Of ihe remaining pule uAtll
again. In silence they drove once|/he was abandoned, absolutely a- And then the door opened and El-
orange Shell is clean. Mix orange
pulp with dates, coconut, raisins and
nut meats. Return to orange shells.
more up the proud avenue. At El-| bandoned by you, at the Six Arts|len, with relief bubbling up to her
len's bidding Tony tunned off, at last,/ last evening. That you blew, just be-|lips found that she was laughing.
into a side street—into a small alley.| fore dawn, with a handsomer man. Only’ she shouldn't seh pith toe Place oranges in a baking dish' with
And then he siopped the car in front} How's that for scandal, Dick? How's | really—not at Pandy? For Sendy'a % inch of water in bottom of pan.
of the building that she indicated. that—-” face was as lugubrious as it was Balke in a blod Bverr foe: 46 aoinuted,
“IT suppose,” he said with a childish Dick was scraping the paint from | angry. os | Take out of oven and put on each
wistfullness, ‘that you'd not like tO’) his palette. He held his palette knife “I {hOuent maybe I'd find you orange a spoonful of meringue made
have me come up, and wait for you in| very much as though it were a dag-|here,” he told Ellen. “Say, you're a from; :
the studio? I’d be very quiet.” | ger. peach, you are! I hunted a!l over the 1 egg white, stiffly beaten
But Ellen shook her head in swift “Ellen told me all about it,’’ he| whole hotel for you.” 1 teaspoon sugar
terror, a terror that was inspired by | said briefly. , Ellen didn't Say anything. She Sprinkle meringue with coconut and
a certain sense of embarrassmert. | The clock struck five—the clock in merely stood, in her white buckskin |
return oranges to oven to. brown.
Serve hot or cold. A marshmallow
may be used to top each orange in
“Not now, Tony!" she said. “Not|the Tower. And Ellen, who for a mo- suit, and rocked back and forth with
till five. I'll] be down here, at the| ment had forgotten, whirled around the storm of mirth. Only it wasn’t
door, waiting then.” on one slender moccasined heel. | just good clean fun, tha: mirth, it place of meringue. ”
Only Ellen—-wearily climbing the “Oh, I must run,” she said. “I real- was something of a mental upheaval. Children’s Delight
stairs to Dick’s high attic studio—j|ly must Dick. I've a date for five. "| “I'd like to know how you got like 1 tablet for making junket
didn't know how long Tony sat in the ' must—’’ that, all of a sudden. Going so ioose, 1 pint milk
red roadster, beside the front door ot | Claire hitched her skirts the mer- [ mean. After all, I've been pretty 1 teaspoon vanilla flavoring
the studio house. With his hands! est fraction of an imch lower. “I sup- regular —" stormed Sandy. “No Dick, 1 tablespoon cocoa
clasped tight on the wheel, and his; pose,” she said, “that the red Rolls,, I’m darned if I'll can it!—It hasn't 3 tablespoons honey
mouth not very firm, and his eyes| at the curb, is waiting for you?” always been the easiest thing in the % cup heavy cream
Staring straight ahead at nothing a'} Ellen was. staring toward the world, letting you get away with Crisp rice, corn or wheat flakes.
all. screen, but she stopped short at, murder, just because you're suppose Mix honey and cocoa to a smooth
Just before she knocked on the door | Claire’s words. Stopped for a sec- to bea wide-eyed innocent. And then
of Dick's studio, even as her hand|ond as Cinderella must have stopped you treat me like a sap!"
was raised for the knocking, Ellen} when all df her loveliness was turn-| Suddenly Dick had laid aside the
paste. Heat slowly to boiling, stir-
ring constantly. Let boil one minute,
continuing to stir. Dissolve tablet for
remembered her wedding ring. She|ing back to rags. | palette with which he had been toy-| jynket in one tablespoon cold water.
couldn’t have forgotten it—mot really “It's not down there already?” she|ing. In long strides, he Had crossed| Warm milk to lukewarm (110 de
it was such a gallant, glittering small} asked. ‘Why, I said—” the room to Sandy’s side. As he grees F.) Add vanilla flavoring, hon-
ring. She drew it off so sharply tha‘ Claire was laughing. Her laughter! stood there, he looked formidable, for] ey and cocoa mixture to lukewarm.
one of the blue stones scratched her| blew, like thistledown, against the] all his gauntness. Mix well. Add dissolved tablet for
littlest finger of all, and folded it in-| sound of feet—the sound of feet, once (Continued next week) junket. Stir quickly ¢
to the corner of her handkerchief, angd| =—~— ———_ - —__ — - ~ - = ———
placed the handkerchief in her pock-
et. She transferred the other ring,
the ‘great solitary sapphire, to her
right hand.
She felt like a feminine Judas as
she did it.
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HERE IT IS! SOMETHING FOR NOTHING
Dick was standing before a huge
canvas, with his paint-marked shiri
carelessly open at the throat, and his
hair rumpled, and his eyes intent upon
some detail of his picture.
She went ‘behind the screen in
Dick's studio. And got out her blue
crepe dress (her wedding dress !)
and put on the’ white buckskin suit
and the coral turquoise beads. And
like a little girl—onily one dressed up
to play pretend~ she emerged from |
behind the screen, and took her place
in a kneeling attitude, with her two
pink palms cupped together in froni
of her, and her face raised to the
smoky blur of the studio ceiling. She
was an Indian priestess, you see. A
very young one—suitable to belong
in any school. i.
Dick made no comment. He paint- |
ed with bold, sure, brisk strokes.
It was four-thirty. Ellen, counting
the strokes of the clock that sounded
from the Metropolitan Tower, not
So far away, wondered if Dick were |
almost through with painting. Dick |
was painting absorbedly. She knew
that she couldn’t break into his ab-
sorption, no matter what became of |
it! The years with her mother had
taught her not to interrupt creation
unless some desperation drove her to
it. However, she asked herself, was-
n't marriage a desperate matter?
Wasn't it, in the final analysis? She
began to count her heartbeats each
heartbeat was a second, wasn't it?
She counted for a long while .
The clock chimed again in the
Tower. It was four forty-five.
“Almost done?’’ she ventured ner-
vously. But Dick didn't answer, whch
meant that he wasn't.
There was a shuffle of feet on the
Stairs Ellen started, her nervous-
ness growing, before she realized thai
the shuffle was too hght to be made
by Tony's feet. It must be a girl who
was coming.
“,..90 that Our Visitors
will be Sorry to Leave”
“If we are going to invite people to this country,
we must be honest with them . . . Courtesy costs
nothing and is one of our greatest tourist assets
- . . Let us so treat strangers within our gates
that it will be easy for them to come, pleasant for
them to stay, and difficult for them to leave.”
Re. Hon. R. BE BENNETT, Prime Minister of Canada, to the Cana-
dian Assoctation of Toursst and Publicity Bureaus, November 6, 1934.
—_ —
P)
isis’ tourist activ'ties represent more than a great industry from
which everybody benefirs. They provide an Opportunity to create what the
Prime Minister has described as ‘that feeling of neighbourlinéss’’ which is
such a vital factor in building upcordial relations within the family of nations.
x
‘for both these reasons, may I urge upon the people of Canada the im-
portance of showing consideration, courtesy and honesty to guests of our
country? Let us all do those little acts of kindness which count for so much
when one travels in a strange land.
We have a beautiful country. Wemust keepitso. We want our visitors
to travel highways free from disfigurement, walk the streets of cities that
are orderly and clean, and find at the end of every day's travel an inviting
spot to rest. Canadians should turn their attention now to the impartant
work of preparing for next year's tourist season.
cAs a nation, we are advertising abroad the attractions of Canada as a
holiday land. We must sce to it that our guests return home with only the
happiest recollections —and the determination to come back again and again.
Nor should we forget, in planning our own vacations, that there are
beauties to discover and friendships to be made in our neighbouring prov-
inces,, We live in one of the world’s most glorious playgrounds — let us
Jearn to know better the rich variety of its travel attractions.
B) /)
J) ‘
We} UA Ut¢4u
MINISTER OF RAILWAYS AND CANALS
It was a girl. It was Claire. per-
fectly groomed from her slippers of
suede to her sofit straw beret.
|
“I didn’t expeat to see you here,” iy
she said, “after what I heard! I yt Ww ip
thought for once I might get a break CANADIAN TER N EL BUREAU
and find Dick by himself.” LaGESS
Ellen hadn't heard the last part of Ottawa, Canada
the other girl’s spéech. Her whole
being stood forward, on uuptoe, to
catch the first part of it.
“What have you heard?” she asked
in a breathless little voice PT ee ee a en ee es ee
ILE
a ee
Rowe
son of 1934.
During the next two months our refinery
will be closed down, and we will be making al-
terations and additions to enable us to take
care of the 1935 business which judging by the
season just passed, will tax our present plant
to the utmost. In order to keep pace with the
anticipated 1935 demand we are increasing
the capacity of our present plant and installing
an additional 100,000 gallons storage. Opera-
tion of the refinery will re-commence on Feb-
ruary 15th and we will have a stock of ap-
proximately 300,000 gallons on hand when
the spring rush commences.
We would point out for general informa-
tion that during 1934 there has probably been
more activity in the way of oil well production
than in any other year of the previous history
of the Wainwright field. We have employed
from ten to twenty men during the season, 80
per cent of whom have been residents of the
Wainwright district. In 1935 we anticipate
there will be further production of Wain-
wright crude, and we are confident that there
will also be further new wells drilled in this vi-
cinity.
Our distribution facilities will be much
further augmented during the coming year;
also it is the intention of the company to con-
struct five or six bulk plants at selected points
throughout North-eastern Alberta and North-
western Saskatchewan. It is also our intention
to place five additional tank trucks on distribu-
tion service during next season.
We have adequate stocks on hand at pre-
sent to take care of any demands during the
period we will be making our alterations, and
men will be on duty at the plant day or night
to take care of any requirements there may be.
We realize that it is only through the co-
operation of the public that any business can
succeed, and we ask for your hearty co-opera-
tion and support even more in 1935 than was
accorded us In the season now past.
Gold Standard Oils Ltd.
PRODUCERS REFINERS IMPORTERS
Wainwright Alberta
We wish to express our thanks to the pub-
lic for their support during the operating sea-
The following (which is truly time-
ly philosophy) is taken from the dia-
mond jubilee edition of the Amerst-
burg Boho” and will no doubt boa read
with interest: i
The more I see of depressions, and
the people who make depressions, the
more I believe Grampa and Grandma
were very, very clever people. When
I think of the depressions of 1837,
1852 and 1872. Father with the aia
of an axe, a butcher knife and per-
haps a gun and a yoke of oxen, with
his own two hands provided food,
shelter and fuel for his family. Moth-
er, with her two hands, a _ fireplace
and a spinning wheel, provided the
meats, clothing and extras.
No relief officer brought up their
sad complaints to the council every
week about how that as they had al-
ways been used to having Hawaiian
pineapple for their salads and now
the relief board was sending thai
cheaper brand, and they were not go-
ing to stand for that lower standing
of living, etc., etc., and 90 on and on.)
There were no sympathetic pension
| boards. If a widow had two good
boys they were considered an asset
not a burden. Newspapers had no
Space to use advertising depressions,
coming as they did only once a week
and all that week's world news to
cram into five or six pages. Times
were hard, money was scarce, and
bank panics and failures were very
plentiful, but nobody talked much a-
bout it, they were too busy. You paid
your taxes in gold, and after that
| there was very little money exchang-
ed to worry about. The children
ate mush and miik for supper and if
they complained someone would be
| Sure to say: “Mush and milk it is?
| Sure and you are lucky to be having
milk. Me with me own wee bonny
cow dry this fornight yet.”
They had M.P.’s put not to com-
plain to. They sent them up to
| Parliament to mind the affairs of
the nation and not to be bothered by
the likes of our petty cares. Anda
very good job those old statesmen
made of it too. Not having their days
interrupted by friends dashing in call-
| ing them “Charlie old boy.” We treat-
ed them respectfully and asked no fa-
vors nor expected any.
When we wanted wood we took
‘down the axe and said: ‘Well, boys,
it's time we were getting up next
winter’s wood, and if snow holds off,
for next summer too.” We cut it,
hauled it home and made long piles
around the back yard, and burned
just as much as we wanted to. A-
gents, tramps and visiting relatives
judged a man by the size of his wood-
pile. If it was long and straight,
that man you knew was sure to have
Seed for his next spring’s seeding;
flour for his winter's bread; a pig
or two fattening when the meat gave
' out; and when his wife went to bake
; She never saw the bottom of the meal
Sack. He was what the people called
“Provident” (an old-fashioned word
| but you can find its meaning in any
dictionary.) If he wanted flour he
raised wheat and corn and had it
ground into flour; if he wanted meat
, he killed a pig not via motor-truck,
| Via railroad, via stockyard, via but-
cher, via shop, via car; but went right
| out into the back yard, heated a big
| kettle of water and killed his own
| pork and brought the liver into the
house for supper, all the same day.
Not a pleasant joh of course. But
if you like hunting, I have seen quite
| as much excitement at a pig-killing
| aS at a bear hunt. Many an old brown
pig said “Woof!” quite as effectively
|; as the old brown’ bear whe = said
| “Woof!”
| If you tired of pork you molded
| some bullets and went hunting, and
it did not take $150, three guides and
| five dogs those days to kill a deer.
| You went out after dinner and came
| back about supper time and asked
“Are the boys all here, cows all
come home?” “Yes, yes.” ‘Well
then, I’ve shot a deer; come on every-
| body and help me carry it home be-
| fore the wolves get it.”
If the family wanted a dress or
a quilt, a carpet, a coat or stockings,
mitts and hoods, somebody (geneéral-
ly it was mother) had to get some
fleeces sheared, wash, card, spin and
| weave it. Making and knitting were
| only pastimes in the evening after
| the yarn was spun. Soap, sugar, can-
| dles, fruit, honey and vegetables had
to be planned for and made long be-
fore they were needed. There was
ho passing the responsibility on to
| anyone else. If you wanted water
| you dug a well; if you wanted milk
| you kept a cow; if you wanted fruit
| you planted it; for nobody was com-
|} ing around next winter in a sleigh
and hand it to you.
Not only the farmers, but towns-
people as well, had each a many-gabl-
ed stable that tried not to look like
cow, a pig, some hens, and perhaps
pridefully, a carriage horse. Often
on busy nights at the store the store-
keeper’s wife kilted up her skirts and
went out and milked the cow. Jusi
fancy! and cows had just as big
eyes and horns as they have now.
' Really more so, as Ayershires were
popular.
Terrible tales were told of the
Indians who believed: Man has died
GIVE FOOTWEAR THIS XMAS —
from time to time but not from over- F . . . .
Be sensible this year and give something use-
work; who starved or froze when
blizzards, accidents or illness came
upon them unprepared.
People could not blame’ the Hydro
if the lights went out, or the water-
works department if there was no
water. Nor the milkman, the grocer
and relief committee if they and their
childrem went hungry. It made them
self-reliant to know that... “the
fault, dear Brutus, is not in our
stars (if the fire goes out) but in
ourselves.” They did not complain
so everlastingly much and pass the
blame for all their ills on from man
to man or to even nations. There
was not much of an audience if they
did. It is very hard to keep up &
complaint if no one is listening or
giving sympathy. There was no
---- Wainwright’s Leading Shoe Store ----
sympathy from the Indians. “oot,
you pot lodge, corn, pig. Goot!” The
G RAHAM’ S
old French spread their hands, “Next
The Home of Good Shoes
year everything be 90 lovely, you |=-"~ =~ ~——— SS _—
see.’ If you wrote your troubles
home it took the letter ten weeks
to come back saying: “We told you
so, going off to such heathen lands,
but you would go."’ Not with the
stamps. The old settlers smiled:
“You should have been here in the
'30's, my lad, those were the days
we had really hard times. Many’s &
time I mind "No, they did noi
waste time wailing to the heavens
te
t ed to the d and called PACI FIc
but stepp te) re door
“John, Henry, Thomas, Mary, Ellen, COAST
Susan, Tillie; come and bring the ba- To Vancouver, Victoria, New
by to supper. There is mush and milk, Westminster and Prince Rupert.
and hurry for Father is ready to
Say grace.”
It was hand. Of course it was hard
to see the children in need of shoes.
food or schooling—as many were. Il
was heart-breaking when illness came
and a tragedy when the cow died.
Fifty per cent of these early settlers
were not tnained for hardships, but
were town-English whose idea of
economical living was buy before ev-
ery meal just enough for that meal
and a penny’s worth of coal to cook
it with. There was no waste of any
thing left over and no extra storage-
room to pay rent for. They had to
revise every belief they had in Cana-
da in order to live. However, people
were amazingly kind to others in
trouble or illness and helped each
other in every way. They coined a
new English word, “Bee.”
Where are those children now, bro-
ken a.d bent from their harships?
They are walking straight and stiff
in cur streets they helped to pave;
into our churches that they built (90
per cent of all our present churches
were built during and right after the
last hard times); past the schools,
halls and public buildings they have
paid for. Into their big old faci
homes and barns with walnut doors.
ful. See our large and complete stock of new
FANCY FURRED AND BEADED MO.-
CASSINS, OXFORDS, OVERSHOES
PUMPS, SLIPPERS, GLOVES,
SOCKS, TIES, BELTS, ETC.
All reasonably priced and are bound to please
to
EASTERN
CANADA
To Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and
other Eastern points, with stop-
over privileges.
Tickets on sale daily from
December Ist, 1934, to Jan-
uary 5th, 1935.
Final return limit, three
months from date of sale.
to Central United States
From Manitoba (Winnipeg and West) Saskatchewan and
Alberta to Des Moines, Minneapolis, Duluth, Chicago,
Kansas City and certain other points. Tickets on sale
daily from December Ist, 1934, to January 5th, 1935.
Final return limit, three months from date of sale.
aoe
‘CAN
Sabie taW aa ee
Tickets on sale daily from Nov-
ember 15th, 1934, to February
28th, 1935.
Final return limit, April 30th, 1935.
” Attractive fares also to California and
Honolulu.
For full particulars consult Local Agent
= W.673.34 ==
Brighten the home
With a New Table L A M P
Octagon-shape and other vase-base table
models. Shades of beautiful (soft glow
transparent silk).
Mother's first pride is her home. And to add
a gorgeous Table Lamp to it is to delight her.
You know right well it’s what she wants. ’
J. C. McLeod and Son
MAIN STREET PHONE 14 WAINWRIGHT
The tradespeople liked to see them
coming to town because if they have
learned one thing more than another
it was no debts. They had a quaint
old custom in those fai-off days If = : =
a man had a debt he paid it. If he
died his son paid it, or his son-in-law.
It had to be paid. The stores sold
less, but they got paid for what was
sold. ,
If mother wanted a walnut sofa
they saved up dimes in the bottom of
the clock for five years to pay for it.
They may have lacked in education
Me HOTEL
hast: \ J
| | | We > ; <
| | 7 LN
splendidly. They could count so that |
tCALGARY
$5 down $1 a week for one year did Os a yy \ AME A bh
rn . “4
along some lines but they could add
not sound like $5 cost to them, but | ri CENTRE Vbat Ji AVE
3 , ing ste € us |
$58.60, counting stamps. A thousanc AL8O OPERATING
dollar, Seven per cent note was not H OTEL ST REGIS
u
RATES $1 and $1.50 — WEEKLY and MONTHLY RATES
a piece of paper to them. If they
signed their name to it, it was likely
tu cost twenty-five hundreds dollars,
and it would have to be paid. Very}
old-fashioned, Old Country custom of
paying their debts!
They never felt they should not
work. A man prided himself in his
a barn, but neventheless housed @&
work; it was only for strength, health
and the use of his two hands that
he prayed for.
Every bone in their body ached}
when the depression was over, but |
it left their backs straight and their
heads high.— E.T.C.
School - Boy Boners;
| To be healthy don’t eat any kind of}
food.
The liver is an infernal organ
| of the body.
One of the main causes of dust is|
| janitor.
In Milton's time, England would
have been a much holier place if :
‘everyone had belonged to the same B T issue C re aici
sex. é ; i 7 \
A demagogue is a vessel containing 7
J c aed Sta are Sigs
spirituous liquors.
Nourish the skin and tissue
The U.S. government builds peni- ¢
tentiaries for the wild life of America. 5 5
Donotello’s interest in the female] —*
nude made him the father of the|
Renaissance.
beneath with rich, emollient
Melba Tissue Cream. Use
this gentle, penetrating
| Newspapers are useful reporting
calamities such as deaths and mar-
riages.
Wells’ ‘Outline of History’ is a veri-
table millstone on the road to learn-
ing.
Queen Elizabeth never married; ‘iu
had a peaceful reign.
The Prince of Whales is the hair
of the British throne
|
cream to prevent lines and
wrinkles and counteract
the drying effects of expo-
sure and time.
PARFUMERIE MELBA OF CANADA, LID . . . . TORONTO
Natit DOLLS, |
XMAS STATI )
SETS, TOILET. ARTICLES
A complete line of Handy Goods
Every cent spent means a vote in our
prize contest
Wainwrig ht Pharmacy Ltd.
ionery Miecttioal Merchandise
sit — WAINWRIGHT
PHONE 46
~~ WAINWRIGHT _
-MEAT MARKET
Quality Meats - -- Courteous Service
YE OLDE ENGLISH
PORK PIES
Just Arrived Fresh
COLD LAKE FISH
10c
E.W.BONNER, Prop,
Phone 33 Main St. Wainwright
el
per lb
BORN—To Mr.
Kristiansen, of Czar, at the Wain-
wright municipal hospital, on Novem-
ber 29th, a boy.
s
‘
BORN—To Mr. and Mrs, P. Ra-
jotte, at the Wainwright municipal
hospital on November 30th, a boy.
s » s
The matron at the hospital ex-
presses her thanks for the gift of a
couple of down pillows and a pair
of pillow slips from Mrs. K. Shabin
of Heath, who was a grateful recent
patient at the institution.
eee
‘Get your winter’s supply of
coal at the Atlas yard. They speci-
alize in good coal from the best mines
ard have grades from $4.00 to $7.00
per ton.
We are glad to report that Mrs.
J. A. Mackenzie is now doing nicely
following her recent operation.
s s es
Miss J. Dunsmore, Dorothy Crocker
and Frank Wright were over to
Hardisty for a week end visit with
friends there.
s
Mrs. Cal. Mackenzie entertained at
a bridge one evening last week, when
quite a number enjoyed her hospitali-
ty.
eee
Ask to have “Anthony Adverse”
reserved for you at the Library.—S.
A. Cumming.
Owing to quite a bad train wreck
on Sunday last near Melville in which
the flyer (No. 1) and No. 403
(freight) were in collision, Monday
morning passengers to the city had
to wait over for some nine or ten
COAL! COAL!
Put in your winter supply before the severe weather starts and the
prices advance
Best Grades from $4.00 to $7.00 per ton
STORM DOORS AND STORM SASH
Made to fit in our own factory in Calgary. They save fuel and pre-
vent draughts and sickness
Lumber and All Kinds of Building Materials
Now is the time to repair your buildings and prepare for the winter.
We handle everything to build anything and -our prices will suit you.
Estimates Free.
Atlas Lumber Co.
Joseph Welch, Mgr.
Res. Phone 93
ALBERTA
Homey Homes
Phone 57
WAINWRIGHT
WASHING CLOTHES IS A WOMAN’S
MOST TIRESOME TASK!
Men work with all the latest labor-saving but
still washing by hand as they have been for 5000 years
To Banish This Wash-tub Slavery use a
Northern Electric Washer
IMPROVED FRENCH GYRATOR—ONE-PIECE SOLID PRESSED
STEEL TUB—HEAT-TREATED PORCELAIN TUB—OVERSIZE
WRINGER ROLLEKS—AND GUARANTEED BY
NORTHERN ELECTRIC
devices women are
Available in Electric and Power models. Do your next washing with
a power washer.
TORY'S SERVICE STATION
PHONE 5 WAINWRIGHT
If in Doubt
What to
Trying to solve that same annual Christmas
Just tell us
puzzle —what to give? Forget ft...
who the gift is for ahd we'll produce an ap-
propriate suggestion.
SKATES, HOCKEY EQUIPMENT, SKIS,
SLEDS, ETC,
Shelf and Heavy Hardware, Horse Blankets,
Household Requisites, Heaters and Ranges,
Kitchen Utensils, etc.
W ASHBURN’S
“If it’s Hardware we have it”
Main Street
Wainwright
hours.
Mr. W. T. Brunker had the mis-
fortune to turn his car over into the
ditch on the north road one evening
last week; happily without any per-
sonal injury, although one of the car
wheels was smashed.
s s
Quite a lot of wheat has_ been!
trucked in during the past week, with
the slight rise in grain prices.
. *
Oh, oh! Here they come ful:
force! Friday evening next. Harmony
| Minstrels.
ee
i}
* * *
| Sympathy is expressed to Mr. and
|; Mrs, Cecil Hicox, who have one of
their little ones suffering from scarlet
' fever.
s
After a stay here of only three
‘months, Mr. R. Lobb has_ returned
‘with his family to Stoughton, Sask.,
from whence he came. They left at
the and were hoping for
real good travelling for the trip.
s
week end,
the devotees of that sport, and the
big opening is dated for tomorrow
(Thursday) evening when no doubt a
big crowd will be enjoying the
on the ringing blade.
. . s
*** Tt is better to carry fire and ac-
er need it, than to need it for five
minutes and be without it.
will look after your
insurance to your entire satisfaction. |
. s a |
Owing to the fact that little Gwen |
Heffernan has contracted scarlet fe-
cident insurance all your life and nev- |
Joe Welch |
requirements in!
The skating rink is now ready for!
. |
time
and Mrs. A. |
ver, the Heffernan home on Fifth
avenue east iS now under quarantine.
Errol and his dad are now “boarders |
out!” |
| . . . |
| A pleasant evening was spent by
the members of the N.I. club on
i Monday when they gathered at the
; home of Mrs. EF. Frickelton |
s °
| s
Ice-making is to start right away
| |
at the curling rink and we shall soon
hear the welcome
“soop ‘er up!”
Star.
The
arranping to provide
j at the
Patronize
boys of the Trail Rangers
hit
are
tle refreshers
rink each
the
Thursday evening
boys.
STRAW Or OTHER
FODDER
Wanted For Export
HAY PRESSES, HAMMER
MILLS AND CUTTING BOXES
can be placed for full winter's
work
Sheriff Malcolm McGregor,
Court House
BRANDON MANITOBA
of a
j the “broom and stane"’ devotees! a
- s . — cae a
|
es > If you no longer use it, sell it
through a “For Sale" advt. in The —for your
THE STAR, WAINWRIGHT, ALBERTA.
Foe” SP ARTE 0 AE a AP OE Pe
The recently opened new “snack
shop on Main Street is closing this
week, and the proprietors are return
ing to the city. At least, s0 we are
informed.
.
Having visited her sister Mrs, A.
Adams for a couple of weeks, Mrs.
Rowsell, of Edmonton, returned home
on Monday last.
e
s s
The show you have been waiting
for. Harmony Minstrels at the thea-
tre on. Friday evening next. Don’t
miss it! Big dance will follow the per-
formance.
see
Col. A. C, Gillespie, secretary and
aide de camp to Lieut.-Governor
Walsh, died on Saturday last in Ed- ;one of the wettest streets in town
motton from a sudden attack of heart |
trouble.
>
Mrs, Fish, sr., is here from’ her
home at Rumsey on a visit to her
son Frank and his family.
s s s
We are glad to learn that Mrs.
Currie is feeling somewhat better
during the past few days.
s
s o
eee
While the mild weather lasts
and prices are low get your building
in shape for the more strenuous wea-
ther. Buy your building and repair
material at the Atlas yard. Phone
57.
s
Messrs. Peter Milne and Martin L.
Forster, the two Liberal candidates
for the next elections, were in at-
tendance at the big conference held “in
Calgary at the week end.
* s 2
Mr. and Mrs. Parker were over
from Hardisty at the week end on
a short visit to Mrs. R. G. Duns-
more.
s *
Miss Bertha Stacey, who has been
visiting her sister Mrs. Albert Good-
ale left on Friday for her home in
Edmonton.
4 CLASSIFIED ADS. §
—*
WANTED
BOYS— Are you going to the dance?
If so you. will’ need your suit
cleaned and pressed; also white
sweaters cirefully washed; prices;
reasonable. ' Mrs. (Roy Carl,
Seventh avenue, town. x,
FOR SALE
PIANO, DINING ROOM SUITE AND
other articles for sale. Mrs.
Frank Horn, town. 12-12
SLEIGHS FOR SALE FOR BOTH
hauling and driving; new idea;
strong, good, and cheap; see sam-}
ples at G. C. Tory’s (sr.) Black-
smith shop, town. 5-12
/
To Whom it may Concern:
The time has arrived when
We must ask those owing us to
make at least Some payment on
account.
We relied
honor to do the right thing
are
have on people's
, and
publishing this notice
With the Same purpose in mind.
now
If our debtors would forgive
us for our..debts it might be
feasible to go on as at present,
but unfortunately, this is not
the case
Drs. MAYNES & MIDDLEMASS§ |
|
HEALTH’S
sake... order
O. K.
cil
Wee
Nove gaggia
Rich in the vitamins that build
. Clean sealed
in airtight bottles and delivered
fresh daily
15 QUARTS $1.00
O.K. Dairy
KINGHORN AND BEAR
Phone Driver
R104 will call
up health
Se
SS ITE SEEDS AE REUTER TERMS MY TOS
flitting around!
| for a week on a visit to friends there.
are
sound insurance companies represent- |
ed by
older
Smell, taste, seeing, hearing Universal Presents EDWARD HORTON & GENEVIEVE TOBIN in
so often fail Some little children; “THE UNCERTAIN LADY”
can hear a fly walk on a window
pane,
sting.
DROEMBER. 5th 1934.
< tet he tims
Phe wrvaste Du wes
1 Mayen
yl To
FOR DECEMBER 6-7-8
aR
eae
Yes, suh! Laugh away your
blues by a visit to the Hanmony Min-
strels on Friday evening next at the
Elite. Big dance to follow show. °
» s °
Messrs Jack Carroll and Hd. Gan-
derton took the Lobb belongings
back to Stoughton, Sask., at the week
end, while a load of the effects from
the local Royal bank was taken to #F
Vermilion on Monday by Bill Bibby.
es . ® |
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Knowles were
city visitors for a few days last, week.
end.
‘Tb. Fort Garry COFFEE and cake plate 60c
| lb. Fort Garry TEA and cake plate |
PEARL SOAP, 10 bars 0...
PRINCESS SOAP FLAKES, 2 pkts.
Our Special COFFEE, 3 Ibs...
SUGAR, 20 lbs. $1.33
~ Blue Ribbon BAKING POWDER, 3 lbs. 59¢
‘WAX BEANS, choice quality, tin
Quaker Strawberry JAM, tin
KIPPER SNACKS, 4 tins
oe oes
~ Ven Me iy 4
A gang of men hag been brisy on:
Third. avenue’ this week putting the
drainage system in order, ag this is
i
os:
when the novel Spring thaw starts.
ad
Be sure and take advantage of
the continued mild weather to make
your home comfortable for the colder
spells of winter. Big stock and fair
prices at the Atlas yard. Joe Welch
agent.
Wagner Apples, household pack, case $1.49.
Forryan’s Grocery
For Service Phone 18
“If You Get It At Forryan’s It’s Good”
Business has sure been rushing at
the Bank of Montreal this week ow-
| ing to the tranference of the accounts
| trom the branch of the Royal at the
beginning of the month.
et
Don’t miss the second annual
| curler’s Minstrel Show. This will be
given in the theatre on Friday next,
and a big dance will follow the stage
performance.
s
Shop Early For Christmas
SEE OUR DISPLAY TABLE
$1.25 CUPS AND SAUCERS
$1.85 FRAMED PICTURES
$1.50 FRAMED PICTURES,
75c FRAMED PICTURES...
Odds and Ends in Fancy China at less than
cost
Standard Pharmacy
MEALS AND LUNCHES
TE, genggey MESON hae oe Ay tear
ve PHONE |
Some little damage was done to the
| line as well as the car when a freighi
load of coal left the rails on Friday
night last at the west end of the
| yards.
. e s
*** One of the features of this year’s
Harmony Minstrels will be the instru-
mental number on guitar, banjo, |
lin, etc. as well as that quartette of
male voices imported specially from
down in Alabama (or somewhere).
Anyway, be there on Friday evening
and have a good time. A dance will
follow the show and all for one price.
s
s s
z Dome pee mE
Se ey Gh
Mr. Donald Goodrich was the lucky | 2
guesser on the weight of the cow
which A. Gullickson put up for bids |
on Saturday. Quite a cheap animal,
tco, at “two-bits.” He was only thir- |
SAVE
STEPS
teen pounds heavy with his guess.,
a | call 99 for
California has very little on Wain-|
wright, for on Tuesday morning, Mr. | e est t
McBride of the Bank of Montreal’ Ca S
caught a beautiful yellow butterfly
in his garden, and brought it to the!
Star for proof. Sure! we're in the
banana belt and the little beauty is
Only too glad to serve you by phone. That's
what we're here for. Ring us now for any one
or more of our tasty offerings.
Alma Meat Market
* . |
Miss Dorothy Wilkins is in the city
*** Don't lose sleep keeping a wood | P. PERRAS, Prop.
fire burning at night when you can Be Ne Holden Creamery and bers Dairy Pool
buy good lump coal at the Atlas yard FREE DELIVERY
for $4.00 per ton. Get a load next |
lime in town. Joe Welch, agent
Mr. Chas. Wittmann of Viking was
week end visitor
home here.
a to his parental
Difficult Times
Make it all the more imperative that you be fully
Fire, and that your policies are not allowed to lapse.
|
Mr. Roy McLachlan left on the fly-
er on Tuesday en route to his duties
in the Calgary office of Royal
pank
insured against
the We represent some of the most reliable companies handling
Mrs. Habkirk of Paradise
Valley was in town for a couple of,
days last week visiting her parents. |
|
Winter seems to be here at last, |
and may make up for lost time. Keep
your home warm with clean coal and;
storm sashes from the Atlas yard. |
Joe Welch, agent.
Chas.
Fire, Life, Automobile and in fact every kind
of Insurance
ee
WAINWRIGHT AGENCIES
J. W. STUART, mgr.
WAINWRIGHT
"ELITE THEATRE
Saturday and Monday, December 8-10
WALLACE BEERY—GEORGE RAFT—JACKIE COOPER AND
FAY RAY In
“THE BOWERY ”
A comedy drama United Artists Picture
LITTLE BOY BLUE
Battle for Life—Series Spotted Wings
Wednesday and Thardav, December 12-13
i MAIN STREET
a | .
Mr. Rees, of the department of
Public works, was in to the city for,
a couple of days last week end. H
.
“Happy landings” is in order for
Mr. Quan Hall (Slim) of the Empress
Cafe, who leaves on Monday next to.
Spend a year’s holiday on his native!
heath in Canton, China. |
|
* * *
*** When the weather is cold fires
more prevalent Avoid
property
loss
the
all
by insuring your in
Joe Welch ; |
s
Our senses grow duller as we grow |
A comedy you will enjoy
FINAL CHAPTER OF THE AIR SERIAL
“PHANTOM OF THE AIR”
OSWALD THE LUCKY RABBIT In
“CHICKEN REEL”
UNIVERSAL WEEKLY NEWS EVENTS OF THE
EPISODE No. I —BUCK JONES IN
“GORDON OF GHOST CITY”
Coming Soon -WILL ROGERS IN
and smell the poison of a bee's|
WORLD
JI.W. STUART
AUCTIONEER AND
LIVE STOCK DEALER
Regular Shipping Dates
December 18th
January 2nd.
Highest Prices Paid—See Me
For Satisfaction
“MR. SKITCH”
PAL-NITE Every Wednesday Two admissions for the price of one,
plus five cents—Bring a pal each Wednesday.
Matinee Every Saturday Afternoon 2.30 p.m.
Theatre now opens every Saturday Night at 7.30 p.m.